Abstract

BackgroundAdjuvant endocrine therapy can improve disease-free survival and time before recurrence in breast cancer patients. However, it is associated with considerable side effects that negatively affect patients’ quality of life and cause non-adherence. The recently demonstrated effect of individual expectations on side-effect development (nocebo effect) suggests that psychological factors play a role in the prevention of side effects. The aim of this study is to evaluate cognitive-behavioral side-effect prevention training (SEPT) for breast cancer patients. This article describes the study protocol and applied research methods.Methods/DesignIn a randomized controlled trial, 184 female breast cancer patients are assigned to receive either SEPT, standard medical care or a manualized supportive therapy at the start of adjuvant endocrine treatment. SEPT consists of three sessions of cognitive-behavioral training including psychoeducation to provide a realistic view of endocrine therapy, imagination-training to integrate positive aspects of medication into daily life, and side-effect management to enhance expectations about coping ability. Side effects three months after the start of endocrine therapy serve as primary outcomes. Secondary outcomes include quality of life, coping ability and patients’ medication adherence. Patients’ expectations (i.e., expectations about side effects, coping ability, treatment and illness) are analyzed as mediators.DiscussionThe optimization of expectations might be a potential pathway in health care to improve patients’ quality of life during long-term medication intake. The results will provide implications for a possible integration of evidence-based prevention training into clinical practice.Trial registrationClinicalTrials.gov, (NCT01741883).

Highlights

  • Adjuvant endocrine therapy can improve disease-free survival and time before recurrence in breast cancer patients

  • National and international guidelines recommend it for long-term intake, over at least five years, in patients with hormone-receptor-positive primary breast cancer [1,2]

  • Discussion expectations have been found to predict the occurrence of side effects in cancer patients, this study presents the first randomized controlled trial evaluating a short-term cognitive-behavioral intervention to prevent side effects during adjuvant endocrine therapy by optimizing breast cancer patients’ expectations

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Summary

Introduction

Adjuvant endocrine therapy can improve disease-free survival and time before recurrence in breast cancer patients It is associated with considerable side effects that negatively affect patients’ quality of life and cause non-adherence. Longterm evaluations of adjuvant hormonal therapy showed that a substantial proportion of the reported side effects were not related to the treatment [13] These side effects, such as headaches, skin irritation, dizziness, nausea and gastrointestinal irritation, have no known pharmacological association with endocrine treatment and are termed non-specific medication side effects [14]. They are influenced by patient characteristics such as expectations and pre-existing symptoms. Negative expectations can influence the occurrence of nonspecific side effects but even worsen specific side effects via the nocebo-mechanism (nocebo effect) [17,18]

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