| Literature DB >> 31905890 |
Ian M Kronish1, Ying Kuen Cheung2, Jacob Julian1, Faith Parsons1, Jenny Lee1, Sunmoo Yoon3, Heidis Valdimarsdottir4,5, Paige Green6, Jerry Suls7, Dawn L Hershman8, Karina W Davidson7.
Abstract
Purpose: Little is known about the effectiveness of bright white light therapy (BWL) for depressive symptoms in cancer survivors, many of whom prefer non-pharmacological treatments. The purpose of this study was to compare the effectiveness of BWL versus dim red light therapy (DRL) on depressive symptoms within individual cancer survivors using personalized (N-of-1) trials.Entities:
Keywords: N-of-1 trials; bright white light therapy; cancer survivor; depression; personalized medicine.
Year: 2019 PMID: 31905890 PMCID: PMC7151038 DOI: 10.3390/healthcare8010010
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Healthcare (Basel) ISSN: 2227-9032
Figure A1Examples of graphic visualizations of data provided to patients and the study clinician over the course of the personalized trial. (a) Real-time visualization of depressive symptoms, fatigue symptoms, and side-effects chronology within the smartphone application. (b) Illustrative visualization of average depressive symptom scores by treatment period as shown to patients at the end of the personalized trial. Blue columns referred to symptoms during bright white light treatment periods. Red columns referred to symptoms during dim red light treatment periods. To facilitate interpretation, depressive symptom scores were subtracted from 100 such that higher scores indicated fewer depressive symptoms. The checkmark indicated that differences in lightboxes were statistically significant (i.e., p < 0.05 in adjusted model).
Figure 1Patient flow diagram. Abbreviations: WR/RW, balanced treatment sequence beginning with bright white light therapy (W, RW/WR, balanced treatment sequence beginning with dim red light (R).
Baseline patient characteristics (N = 9).
| Characteristic | Mean (SD) or |
|---|---|
| Age in years, mean (SD) | 54.2 (17.7) |
| Female | 7 (78%) |
| Hispanic | 3 (33%) |
| Race: | |
| White | 7 (78%) |
| Black | 1 (11%) |
| Other | 1 (11%) |
| Cancer type: | |
| Breast | 5 (56%) |
| Thyroid | 2 (22%) |
| Bone | 1 (11%) |
| Skin | 1 (11%) |
| Prior cancer treatment: | |
| Surgery | 7 (78%) |
| Chemotherapy | 4 (44%) |
| Radiation | 3 (33%) |
| Hormonal | 4 (44%) |
| Depressed (PHQ8 ≥ 10) | 6 (67%) |
| PHQ-8 score, mean (SD) | 9.7 (2.2) |
| Current depression treatment: | |
| Receiving any depression treatment | 7 (78%) |
| Prescribed antidepressants | 4 (44%) |
| Receiving psychotherapy | 6 (67%) |
| Complementary and alternative medicine | 3 (33%) |
| Decision-making preference: | |
| I want doctor to decide | 0 (0%) |
| I want doctor to consider my ideas | 1 (11%) |
| I want doctor and I to make decisions together | 6 (67%) |
| I want to decide | 2 (22%) |
PHQ-8—patient health questionnaire; SD—standard deviation.
Characteristics and outcomes of personalized trials of light therapy for depressive symptoms (N = 9).
| Patient | Season (Months) | Treatment Sequence | Percent of Days with Symptom Assessments | Mean Depressive Symptoms | Mean Fatigue Symptoms | Treatment Preference at end of Trial | Likelihood of Continuing Light Therapy | Helpfulness of Participation | Recommend to Others |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Fall | W-R-R-W | 19% | Insufficient | Insufficient | Neither | Not at all likely to continue | Not at all helpful | Recommend a little bit |
| 2 (7703) | Fall | R-W-W-R | 62% † | R: 5.9 | R: 7.0 | R | Somewhat likely to continue | Somewhat helpful | Recommend a little bit |
| 3 | Fall | W-R-R-W | 80% | R: 3.6 | R: 4.7 | R | Somewhat likely to continue | Very much helpful | Recommend strongly |
| 4 | Fall | W-R-R-W | 64% | R: 2.6 | R: 2.6 | Neither | Not at all likely to continue | Not at all helpful | Recommend not at all |
| 5 | Fall | R-W-W-R | 66% | R: 3.0 | R: 3.8 | W | Very likely to continue | Very much helpful | Recommend strongly |
| 6 | Winter (November–February) | W-R-R-W | 57% | R: 3.0 | R: 4.6 | W | Very likely to continue | Very much helpful | Recommend strongly |
| 7 | Winter (December–March) | W-R-R-W | 64% | R: 3.6 | R: 4.8 | W | Very likely to continue | Very much helpful | Recommend strongly |
| 8 | Spring (March–June) | W-R-R-W | 77% | R: 2.2 | R: 3.1 | Either | Unlikely to continue | Somewhat helpful | Recommend strongly |
| 9 | Spring (April–June) | R-W-W-R | 89% | R: 1.1 | R: 7.3 | Either | Unlikely to continue | A little bit helpful | Recommend strongly |
Abbreviations: W, bright white light therapy; R, dim red light therapy; SE, standard error. Depressive and fatigue symptoms were assessed at the end of each day on a scale from 0 (none) to 10 (severe). † Assessments were interrupted in the middle third of the study due to an interruption in the smartphone application.
Figure A2Individual patient-level plots of depressive symptoms over the course of each personalized trial for eight patients who completed the 12-week protocol. Black dots refer to bright white light therapy treatment periods, and red dots refer to dim red light therapy treatment periods. Symptoms were reported at the end of the day using a 0 (no depressive symptoms) to 10 (severe depressive symptoms) visual analog scale.
Figure 2Within-patient differences in depressive symptoms using bright white light therapy (BWL) versus dim red light therapy (DRL). Depressive symptoms were modeled adjusting for linear time trend and accounting for autocorrelations one day apart, p < 0.05 denoted statistical significance. White diamond indicates significantly lower depressive symptoms with BWL, red diamond indicates significantly higher depressive symptoms with BWL, and blue diamond indicates no significant difference in depressive symptoms between BWL and DRL.