Jennifer E Vaughn1, Chesley Ammermann2, Maryam B Lustberg3, Warren K Bickel2, Jeffrey S Stein2. 1. Department of Internal Medicine, Virginia Tech Carilion School of Medicine. 2. Center for Transformative Research on Health Behaviors, Fralin Biomedical Research Institute at VTC. 3. Stefanie Spielman Comprehensive Breast Center, The Ohio State University.
Abstract
OBJECTIVES:Oral endocrine therapy improves survival among hormone responsive breast cancer (HRBC) survivors; however, 30-70% of patients are nonadherent. One patient-centered factor that may impact adherence is delay discounting (DD), or the degree to which patients value future outcomes. In prior research, DD is robustly associated with maladaptive health behavior; but no work to our knowledge has examined delay discounting and medication nonadherence in breast cancer patients. Study 1 examined cross-sectional associations between DD and endocrine therapy nonadherence. Study 2 examined whether DD in the HRBC population is amenable to a brief intervention-episodic future thinking (EFT), in which participants preexperience future events. METHOD: In Study 1, HRBC survivors completed assessments of DD and endocrine therapy adherence (pill count and self-report). In Study 2, participants were randomized to engage in a brief behavioral intervention (EFT) or a control condition, and again completed assessments of DD. RESULTS:Eighty nine female HRBC survivors completed Studies 1 and 2. Controlling for other known risk factors, greater DD was significantly associated with poorer pill-count but not self-report adherence. In Study 2, the EFT intervention significantly reduced DD when compared to control episodic thinking. CONCLUSIONS: DD is associated with direct-observation (pill count) measures of endocrine therapy adherence in HRBC survivors, suggesting it is a potential therapeutic target for improving adherence. This target is also amenable to intervention with EFT. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).
RCT Entities:
OBJECTIVES: Oral endocrine therapy improves survival among hormone responsive breast cancer (HRBC) survivors; however, 30-70% of patients are nonadherent. One patient-centered factor that may impact adherence is delay discounting (DD), or the degree to which patients value future outcomes. In prior research, DD is robustly associated with maladaptive health behavior; but no work to our knowledge has examined delay discounting and medication nonadherence in breast cancerpatients. Study 1 examined cross-sectional associations between DD and endocrine therapy nonadherence. Study 2 examined whether DD in the HRBC population is amenable to a brief intervention-episodic future thinking (EFT), in which participants preexperience future events. METHOD: In Study 1, HRBC survivors completed assessments of DD and endocrine therapy adherence (pill count and self-report). In Study 2, participants were randomized to engage in a brief behavioral intervention (EFT) or a control condition, and again completed assessments of DD. RESULTS: Eighty nine female HRBC survivors completed Studies 1 and 2. Controlling for other known risk factors, greater DD was significantly associated with poorer pill-count but not self-report adherence. In Study 2, the EFT intervention significantly reduced DD when compared to control episodic thinking. CONCLUSIONS: DD is associated with direct-observation (pill count) measures of endocrine therapy adherence in HRBC survivors, suggesting it is a potential therapeutic target for improving adherence. This target is also amenable to intervention with EFT. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2021 APA, all rights reserved).