| Literature DB >> 29609644 |
Suzanne H Richards1,2, Chris Dickens3, Rob Anderson3, David A Richards3, Rod S Taylor3, Obioha C Ukoumunne4, Katrina M Turner5,6, Manish Gandhi7, Willem Kuyken8, Andrew Gibson9, Antoinette Davey3, Fiona Warren3, Rachel Winder3, John Campbell3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Around 17% of people attending UK cardiac rehabilitation programmes have depression. Optimising psychological wellbeing is a rehabilitation goal, but provision of psychological care is limited. We developed and piloted an Enhanced Psychological Care (EPC) intervention embedded within cardiac rehabilitation, aiming to test key areas of uncertainty to inform the design of a definitive randomised controlled trial (RCT) and economic evaluation.Entities:
Keywords: Behavioural activation; Cardiac rehabilitation; Coronary heart disease; Depression; Mental health care coordination; Multimorbidity; Qualitative interviews; Randomised controlled trial
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29609644 PMCID: PMC5880097 DOI: 10.1186/s13063-018-2576-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Trials ISSN: 1745-6215 Impact factor: 2.279
Fig. 1Consolidated Standards of Reporting Trials (CONSORT) Diagram. CONSORT Diagram (with cluster extension) for the CADENCE pilot randomised controlled trial (RCT)
Characteristics of participating sites at baseline
| Team | Allocation | Team location (setting) | Cardiac team clinical staffing | Type of cardiac rehabilitation programme offered (including usual psychological carea) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | UC | Hospital (rural) | 7 nurses (2 full-time; 5 part-time) | Centre-based groups, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 40 |
| B | UC | Community (rural) | 7 nurses (1 full-time; 6 part-time) | Centre-based groups – with some support from a clinical psychologist, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 60 |
| C | UC | Community (rural) | 3 nurses (part-time), 1 team manager (part-time) | Centre-based groups | 12–16 |
| D | EPC | Community (rural/urban) | 2 nurses (1 full-time; 1 part-time) | Centre-based groups, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 26 |
| E | EPC | Hospital (rural/urban) | 2 nurses (part-time) | Centre-based groups, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 70 |
| F | EPC | Mixed hospital + community (urban) | 1 nurse (part-time) | Centre-based groups, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 32 |
| G | EPC | Mixed hospital + community (inner-city) | 4 nurses (part-time) | Centre-based groups – limited psychological input via referral to community mental health workers, Clinic-based individual appointments, Home-based programmes | 33 |
| H | EPC | Mixed hospital + community (inner-city) | 6 nurses (part-time) | Centre-based groups, Clinic-based individual appointments – part-time clinical psychologist linked to team, Home-based programmes | 50–60 |
EPC Enhanced Psychological Care, UC usual care
aUnless stated there is no dedicated psychological support available (either within the team, or through an established referral pathway)
bData derived from the team profile questionnaire completed prior to randomisation. Teams reported the ‘average’ number of patients assessed per month
Participant characteristics at baseline
| UC, | EPC, | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender; | ||
| Male | 7 (50) | 8 (53) |
| Age (years); mean (SD) | 68.1 (8.6) | 62.7 (8.9) |
| Ethnicity; | ||
| White | 14 (100) | 15 (100) |
| Preferred language; | ||
| English | 13 (93) | 15 (100) |
| Other | 1 (7) | 0 (0) |
| Smoking status; | ||
| Never smoked | 5 (36) | 4 (27) |
| Ex-smoker | 9 (64) | 11 (73) |
| Time since quitting smoking (ex-smokers only); | ||
| Less than 6 months | 3 (33) | 3 (27) |
| 6 to 12 months | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| 1 to 5 years | 0 (0) | 2 (18) |
| 5 to 10 years | 1 (11) | 0 (0) |
| More than 10 years | 5 (56) | 6 (55) |
| Index of Multiple Deprivation median decile (IQR) (lower deciles are more deprived) | 6 (4, 8) | 5 (1, 7) |
| Index cardiac event and/or and proceduresa | ||
| ACS and/or revascularisation | 11 (79) | 11 (73) |
| Other heart conditionb | 3 (21) | 1 (7) |
| Other cardiac procedure (pacemaker, valve surgery) | 0 (0) | 3 (20) |
| CIS-R primary diagnosis category; | ||
| No psychiatric diagnosis identified | 9 (69) | 6 (43) |
| Mixed anxiety and depressive disorder – mild | 1 (8) | 1 (7) |
| Mild depressive episode | 3 (23) | 4 (29) |
| Moderate depressive episode | 0 (0) | 3 (21) |
| Secondary diagnosis category; | ||
| No psychiatric diagnosis identified | 12 (92) | 9 (64) |
| Mixed anxiety and depressive disorder – mild | 1 (8) | 1 (7) |
| Generalised anxiety disorder – mild | 0 (0) | 1 (7) |
| Mixed anxiety and depressive disorder | 0 (0) | 2 (14) |
| Specific (isolated) phobia | 0 (0) | 1 (7) |
| Emotional health | ||
| PHQ-9; mean (SD) | 11.9 (1.8) | 14.2 (4.7) |
| BDI; mean (SD) | 12.5 (4.9) | 18.4 (7.4) |
| BAI; mean (SD) | 12.5 (4.4) | 19.3 (10.7) |
| Do you believe you have low mood?; | ||
| Yes | 11 (79) | 11 (73) |
| No | 3 (21) | 4 (27) |
| Do you want any professional help for your low mood?; | ||
| Strongly prefer help | 1 (9) | 5 (45) |
| Prefer help | 4 (36) | 2 (18) |
| Prefer not to receive help | 3 (27) | 3 (27) |
| Strongly prefer not to receive help | 3 (27) | 1 (9) |
| What type of professional help would you prefer?; | ||
| Strongly prefer non-drug help | 6 (55) | 9 (82) |
| Prefer non-drug help | 3 (27) | 0 (0) |
| Prefer drug-based help | 1 (9) | 0 (0) |
| Strongly prefer drug-based help | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Do not mind | 1 (9) | 2 (18) |
| Health-related quality of life | ||
| EQ-5D-5 L; mean (SD) | 0.801 (0.097) | 0.644 (0.226) |
| EQ-5D VAS; mean (SD) | 63.0 (23.5) | 48.7 (19.3) |
| HeartQoL; mean (SD) | 21.3 (9.1) | 15.2 (9.9) |
ACS acute coronary syndrome, BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI-II Beck Depression Inventory, CIS-R Revised Clinical Interview Schedule, EPC Enhanced Psychological Care, EQ-5D-5 L EuroQoL Index, IQR interquartile range, PHQ Patient Health Questionnaire-9, SD standard deviation, UC usual care, VAS Visual Analogue Scale
aClear diagnostic information was not always present
bIncludes atrial fibrillation, chest pain, heart failure or ischaemic heart disease
cSome participants did not complete this component of the baseline assessment
dOnly completed by participants who believed themselves to have low mood
Process data for delivery of Enhanced Psychological Care (EPC) at 8-month follow-up
| Outcome | Usual care (UC), | EPC, |
|---|---|---|
| Number of cardiac rehabilitation sessions; median (min, max) | ||
| Offered | 8 (2, 14) | 7 (0, 24) |
| Attended | 7.5 (1, 12) | 7 (0, 22) |
| Number of EPC sessions attended; | ||
| 8 | N/A | 8 (53) |
| 7 | 1a (7) | |
| 6 | 1b (7) | |
| 1 | 1c (7) | |
| 0 | 4 (27) | |
| Days elapsed from consent date to starting cardiac rehabilitation; median (min, max) | 3 (− 15, 27) | 5 (− 35, 22) |
| Participants who started cardiac rehabilitation prior to trial recruitment; n/ | 6 (43) | 2 (13) |
| Days elapsed from trial entry to start of EPC; median (min, max) | N/A | 5 (0, 19) |
| Days elapsed from trial entry to discharge from cardiac rehabilitation; median (min, max) | 69 (13, 112) | 89 (48, 185) |
| Evidence of psychological care coordination activities provided in nurse notes; | N/A | 5 (33) |
| Referral to GP/other psychological care services; | 0 (0) | 7 (47)d |
aParticipant had only seven sessions scheduled
bParticipant had eight sessions scheduled but did not attend two sessions
cParticipant had only one session scheduled
dFor some patients, there was no evidence of psychological care coordination in the nurse notes, but there evidence of onward referral describe in the GP discharge letter
Cardiac events derived from general practitioner (GP) or cardiac nurse records at follow-up
| Baseline to 5 months | 5 months to 8 months | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cardiac eventa; | UC, | EPC, | UC, | EPC, |
| ACS or revascularisation | 2 | 3 | 0 | 1 |
| Other diagnosisb | 2 | 1 | 1 | 2 |
ACS acute coronary syndrome, EPC Enhanced Psychological Care, UC usual care
aMultiple outcomes can occur in an individual participant
bOther diagnoses recorded include atrial fibrillation, heart failure, ischaemic coronary disease and left ventricular dysfunction
Participant-reported mental and physical health outcomes at 5-month and 8-month follow-up
| Outcome variable | 5 months | 8 months | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| UC, | EPC, | Mean difference or ORa (95% CI) | UC, | EPC, | Mean difference or ORa (95% CI) | |
| BDI-II; mean (SD), | 7.4 (3.7), 14 | 10.2 (8.4), 12 | 1.7 (− 3.8, 7.3) | 7.0 (3.5), 8 | 12.6 (6.6), 9 | 4.4 (− 1.4, 10.2) |
| 50% reduction in BDI-II from baseline; | 7/14 (50) | 5/12 (42) | 0.71 (0.16, 3.25) | 4/8 (50) | 2/9 (22) | 0.29 (0.04, 2.09) |
| Remission (< 14 BDI-II) from baselineb; | 6/7 (86) | 3/7 (43) | 0.13 (0, 1.37) | 4/4 (100) | 2/5 (40) | 0 (0, 1.10) |
| BDI-II MCID (17.5% reduction post baseline); | 11/14 (79) | 10/12 (83) | 1.36 (0.22, 8.31) | 5/8 (63) | 6/9 (67) | 1.20 (0.18, 7.99) |
| BDII-II CSRC from baselinec; | 3/7 (43) | 2/7 (29) | 0.53 (0.07, 4.33) | 2/4 (50) | 1/5 (20) | 0.25 (0, 3.56) |
| BAI; mean (SD), | 9.2 (4.0), 14 | 14.7 (8.3), 13 | 4.6 (− 0.8, 10.0) | 6.4 (4.6), 8 | 12.7 (7.1), 9 | 5.0 (− 1.2, 11.1) |
| EQ-5D-5 L; mean (SD), | 0.875 (0.115), 13 | 0.885 (0.065), 13 | 0.045 (− 0.023, 0.113) | 0.876 (0.092), 8 | 0.827 (0.116), 9 | − 0.041 (− 0.145, 0.064) |
| EQ-5D VAS, mean (SD), | 72 (21), 14 | 72 (21), 12 | 5 (− 13, 22) | 64 (18), 7 | 64 (12), 8 | 1 (− 17, 19) |
| HeartQoL; mean (SD) | 31.5 (4.9), 14 | 22.9 (10.3), 13 | − 8.2 (− 14.9, − 1.4) | 28.3 (6.7), 8 | 28.6 (7.6), 9 | 0.1 (− 7.9, 8.0) |
BAI Beck Anxiety Inventory, BDI-II Beck Depression Inventory, CI confidence interval, CSRC clinically significant and reliable change, EPC Enhanced Psychological Care, EQ-5D L EuroQoL Index, MCID minimally clinical important difference, OR odds ratio, SD standard deviation, UC usual care, VAS Visual Analogue Scale
aBetween-group comparison. The mean difference is adjusted for baseline score. No adjustments for clustering were made
bAt baseline, 7/14 UC participants and 10/15 EPC participants had a BDI-II score ≥ 14; participants with scores ≤ 13 at baseline excluded
cClinically significant and reliable change can only be calculated for participants with a baseline BDI-II score of ≥ 14
Patient experience ratings from the Client Satisfaction Questionnaire (CSQ) and the Friends and Family Test (FFT) at 5-month follow-up
| Patient-reported outcome; | UC, | EPC, |
|---|---|---|
|
| ||
| How would you rate the quality of service you have received? | ||
| Excellent | 9 (69) | 9 (82) |
| Good | 3 (23) | 2 (18) |
| Fair | 1 (8) | 0 (0) |
| Poor | 0 (0) | 0 (0) |
| Did you get the kind of service you wanted?a | ||
| Yes, definitely | 8 (62) | 10 (91) |
| Yes, generally | 5 (38) | 1 (9) |
| To what extent has our programme met your needs?a | ||
| Almost all of my needs have been met | 9 (69) | 9 (82) |
| Most of my needs have been met | 3 (23) | 2 (18) |
| Only a few of my needs have been met | 1 (8) | 0 (0) |
| If a friend were in need of similar help, would you recommend our programme to him or her?a | ||
| Yes, definitely | 9 (64) | 11 (100) |
| Yes, I think so | 5 (36) | 0 (0) |
| How satisfied are you with the amount of help you have received?a | ||
| Very satisfied | 8 (62) | 11 (100) |
| Mostly satisfied | 5 (38) | 0 (0) |
| Have the services you received helped you to deal more effectively with your problems?a | ||
| Yes, they helped a great deal | 8 (62) | 9 (82) |
| Yes, they helped somewhat | 5 (38) | 2 (18) |
| In an overall, general sense, how satisfied are you with the services you have received?a | ||
| Very satisfied | 9 (69) | 10 (91) |
| Mostly satisfied | 4 (31) | 1 (9) |
| If you were to seek help again, would you come back to our programme?a | ||
| Yes, definitely | 7 (54) | 10 (91) |
| Yes, I think so | 4 (31) | 1 (9) |
| No, I don’t think so | 2 (15) | 0 (0) |
|
| ||
| How likely are you to recommend this help or support to friends and family if they needed similar care or treatment?a | ||
| Extremely likely | 10 (71) | 11 (85) |
| Likely | 4 (29) | 0 (0) |
| I did not receive any help or support | 0 (0) | 2 (15) |
EPC Enhanced Psychological Care, UC usual care
aResponses were highly skewed to positive assessments. Unless reported, no participants used the neutral or negative response categories provided
Per patient cost of delivering Enhanced Psychological Care (EPC)
| Unitsd | Unit costs £ | Cost £ | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Initial costs | |||
| For 15 nurses attending training (trainers’ and facilitator’s time, delivery and preparation) | 45 + 41 ha | Various | 7157 |
| Nurse training (nurses’ time) | 56 + 21 hc | 35b | 2695 |
| Nurse manuals (printing) | 8 manuals | 4 | 32 |
| Ongoing costs | |||
| Telephone clinical supervision of behavioural activation (BA) delivery | 35 h | 50 | 1750 |
| Nurses’ time for having supervision (estimated 50 h overall) | 50 h | 35b | 1750 |
| Total overhead cost of providing EPC | 13,384 | ||
| Number of participants in EPC trial arm | 15 | ||
| Mean allocated overhead cost of EPC per patient (in feasibility trial) | 892 | ||
| Per participant nurse time for delivering EPC within cardiac rehabilitation sessions | 1.8 hc | 35b | 63 |
| Patient booklet print costs | 1 | 4 | 4 |
| Estimated cost per EPC recipient | 959 | ||
aTwo figures presented as EPC training was delivered to two different nurse cohorts
bCost per working hour for a Band-5 hospital-based nurse (excluding qualification costs). Unit Costs of Health and Social Care 2015, PSSRU
cMean of 7.8 rehabilitation sessions attended. First, mid-point and final session 20 min each; other 4.8 sessions 10 min each = mean of 1 h 48 mins per participant in total
dData sources: trial records (e.g. invoices) or interviews with relevant study personnel, unless otherwise stated