| Literature DB >> 34880676 |
Poorva Pradhan1, Louise Sharpe1, Rachel E Menzies1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fear of cancer recurrence or progression (FCR) is common amongst cancer survivors and an important minority develop clinically significant levels of FCR. However, it is unclear how current clinical services might best support the growing numbers of cancer survivors.Entities:
Keywords: FCR interventions; cancer; fear of cancer recurrence; fear of progression; oncology
Year: 2021 PMID: 34880676 PMCID: PMC8645945 DOI: 10.2147/CMAR.S294114
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancer Manag Res ISSN: 1179-1322 Impact factor: 3.989
Study Characteristics and Results of Included Papers
| Sample Size | Type of Cancer | No. of Arms | Delivery Mode | Intervention | Outcomes | Effect Size | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cohen’s d (Time of Assessment) | |||||||
| Pradhan et al (2021) | 62 | Ovarian Cancer | Single-arm | Online: Psychoeducational booklet | Psychoeducation: Online PDF booklet. | No effect on fear of progression | 0.17 |
| 1 week | |||||||
| Liu et al (2021) | 61 | Breast Cancer | Single-arm | Face-to-face | Oncologist delivered preventative intervention | FCR reduced | 0.39 (1 month) |
| 0.68 (3 months) | |||||||
| Dieng et al (2016) | 164 | Melanoma | Two | Psychoeducational booklet | Psychoeducation plus psychodynamic-based psychotherapy | FCR reduced | 0.5 (1 month) |
| 0.3 (6 months) | |||||||
| 3 Telephone sessions | |||||||
| Sterba et al (2015) | 92 | Breast Cancer | Two | Mixed | In-person video sessions and educational booklets | No effect on cancer-related worries | −0.22 |
| Otto et al (2017) | 67 | Breast Cancer | Two | Online | Positive psychology: Gratitude intervention | No effect on FCR | 0.21 (1 month) |
| 0.1 (3 months) | |||||||
| Lichtenthal et al (2017) | 110 | Breast Cancer | Two | Online | Cognitive Bias Modification (Interpretation and Attention) | No effect of Cancer Worry Scale | 0.35 |
| Post-treatment | |||||||
| 0.54 (3 months) | |||||||
| van Helmondt et al, (2020) | 262 | Breast Cancer | Two | Online | Cognitive behaviour therapy | No effect on FCR | Not reported |
| Omidi et al (2020) | 105 | Breast Cancer | Three | Face to face | Group and social network-based self-management education on lymphedema | No effect on FCR | Group education: 0.21 |
| Online | |||||||
| Social Network-based education: 0.06 (3 months) | |||||||
| Dirkse et al (2019) | 86 | Multiple | Two | Face to face | Cognitive behaviour therapy | Reduction in FCR | 0.93–0.85 (1 month) |
| Online | |||||||
| Lengacher et al (2018) | 15 | Breast Cancer | Single-arm | Online | Mobile-based Mindfulness Stress Reduction for Breast Cancer | Improvements in fear of recurrence at 6 weeks follow-up | 0.74 |
| Germino et al (2012) | 313 | Breast Cancer | Two | Self-directed | Traditional CBT | No significant improvement in FCR was reported. | Not reported |
| Humphris & Rogers (2012) | 90 | Head and Neck | Two | Face to face, nurse-led | Cognitive behavioural therapy | FCR reduced during treatment, improvement not maintained | 0.56 (3 months) |
| Shields et al (2010) | 44 | Breast Cancer | Two | Single session, tele-coaching | Encourage patients to raise top 3 concerns with oncologist | No effect on FCR | −0.13 |
| Reb et al (2020b) | 31 | Gynaecology | Single-arm | In person and online | Contemporary CBT, hybrid online and face-to-face | Reduction in FoP at 8 and 12 weeks after intervention. | 1.3 (8 weeks) |
| Lung Cancer | |||||||
| Herschbach et al (2010) | 265 | Multiple | Three | Face to face | CBT and SET (based on personal experiences) | Reduction in FoP scores after 12 months for both intervention groups. | CBT: |
| SET: | |||||||
| Butow et al (2017) | 222 | Multiple | Two | Face to face | Contemporary CBT and relaxation training | Improvements in both total FCR-I and severity subscale | 0.33 (3 months) |
| 0.39 (6 months) | |||||||
| Van de Wal et al (2017) | 88 | Multiple | Two | Mixed: | Blended cognitive behaviour therapy | Improvements in FCR at 3 months post intervention. | 0.76 |
| Bannaasan et al (2015) | 59 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face-to-face | Buddhist doctrine-based practice | Reduction in FCR scores after 1 month. | 1.38 (1 month) |
| Tomei et al (2018) | 25 | Multiple | Two | Face to face | Traditional CBT | Reduction in FCR at post-intervention | 0.28 |
| Cameron et al (2007) | 154 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Contemporary CBT for emotional regulation and adjustment | Decrease in cancer recurrence worries after 4 months, not maintained after 6 and 12 months. | 0.59 |
| Lengacher et al (2009) | 84 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Mindfulness-based stress reduction | Improvement in FCR after 6 weeks. | 0.6 |
| Crane-Okada et al (2012) | 49 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Mindful movement program intervention | Decrease in FCR at 6 weeks | 0.57 |
| Heinrichs et al (2012) | 72 | Breast and Gynaecological cancer | Two | Face to face | Couple based coping intervention | Decrease in FoP for intervention participants | 0.57 |
| Bower et al (2015) | 71 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Mindfulness-based intervention | Improvements in FCR at 3 month follow-up in intervention group | 1.39 |
| Dodds et al (2015) | 33 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Meditation-based program called CBCT | Reduction in FCR in intervention group | −1.38 |
| Lengacher et al (2016) | 322 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Mindfulness-Based Stress Reduction for Breast Cancer | Improvements in FCR at 6 and 12 week follow-up | 0.3 (6 weeks) |
| 0.28 (12 weeks) | |||||||
| Merckaert et al (2016) | 159 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | CBT and hypnosis | Reduction in FCR severity post intervention | 0.33 |
| Manne et al (2017) | 352 | Gynaecological Cancer | Three | Face to face and 1 telephone session | Communication-enhancing intervention (CCI) and supportive counselling (SC) | No effect on FCR | 0.11 |
| Victorson et al (2016) | 43 | Prostate | Two | Face to face | Mindfulness Based Stress Reduction | Reduction in recurrence fears | 0.15 |
| Gonzalez-Hernandez et al (2018) | 56 | Breast Cancer | Two | Face to face | Compassion-based intervention | Reduction in FCR related stress at post-intervention and 6 mth follow-up | 0.68 (post-intervention) |
| 0.46 (6 months) | |||||||
| Chambers et al (2012) | 19 | Prostate | Single-arm | Face to face | Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy group intervention | Reduction in FCR | 0.28 |
| Lebel et al (2014) | 56 | Breast and ovarian cancer | Single-arm | Face to face | Cognitive-existential (CE) group intervention | Reduction in FCR | 0.73 |
| Seitz et al (2014) | 20 | Multiple cancers | Single-arm | Online | Traditional CBT | Decrease in FoP | 0.48 |
| Smith et al (2015) | 8 | Multiple cancers | Single-arm | Face to face | Contemporary CBT | Reduction in overall FCR scores and severity subscale at 2-month follow-up | FCR Severity: |
| FCRI-Total: | |||||||
| Arch & Mitchell (2015) | 42 | Multiple cancers | Single-arm | Face to face | ACT | FCR decreased at post intervention, but 1 mth follow-up | 0.66 (post-treatment) |
| 0.11 (1 month) | |||||||
| Momino et al (2017) | 40 | Breast | Single-arm | Face to face | Collaborative care and need-based intervention | No effect on FCR | 0.15 |
| Telephone sessions | |||||||
| Savard et al (2018) | 33 | Multiple cancers | Single-arm | Face to face | Group-based CBT | Significant decrease in FCR at post-treatment | Not reported |
| Davidson et al (2018) | 16 | Breast Cancer | Single-arm | Telephonic sessions | Intervention based on CBT | Decrease in FCR after 1 week follow-up | 0.8 |
| Johns et al (2019) | 91 | Breast Cancer | Three | Face to face | Group-based ACT and Survivorship education | Significant decrease in FCR severity in ACT group | 0.61 (6 months) |
| Lynch et al (2020) | 61 | Melanoma | Single-arm | Mixed | Three step intervention: (1) Treatment as usual; (2) Self-management intervention (3) Individual therapy: contemporary CBT. | Contemporary CBT reduced FCR and FoP. | Self-management-0.11 for FCR |
| 0.02 for FoP | |||||||
| Individual therapy | |||||||
| 0.64 FCR | |||||||
| 0.4 FOP | |||||||
Abbreviations: ACT, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy; AFTER, adjustment to the fear expectation or threat of recurrence; bCBT, blended cognitive behavioural therapy; CAREST, cancer recurrence self-help training; CAU, care as usual; CBT, cognitive-behavioral group therapy; CBCT, Cognitively–Based Compassion training; FCR, fear of cancer recurrence; FoP, fear of progression; MCT, meta-cognitive therapy; SET, supportive-experiential therapy; S-REF, Self-Regulation of Executive Function.
Figure 1Stepped care model to fear of cancer recurrence/progression in oncology services.
Recommendations to Guide Future Research
| Recommendations for Future Research |
|---|
| 1. Development and evaluation of universal minimal interventions (eg clinician-delivered, psychoeducational interventions, informational resources, apps) designed to help prevent FCR. |
| 2. Development and evaluation of minimal interventions (eg internet-delivered treatments) that are targeted for those with mild to moderate FCR |
| 3. Up-skilling oncology professionals to deliver interventions targeting FCR in routine clinical practice. |
| 4. Research to improve existing interventions for severe FCR. |
| 5.Adapting available evidence-based FCR interventions for those with advanced disease. |
| 6. Testing models of stepped care to develop the most efficacious and highly implementable service model. |