Abstract

Virtual reality (VR) has been used as a complementary therapy for managing psychological and physical symptoms in cancer patients. In palliative care, the evidence about the use of VR is still inadequate. This study aims to assess the effect of an immersive VR-based intervention conducted at home on anxiety, depression, and pain over 4days and to evaluate the short-term effect of VR sessions on cancer-related symptomatology. Participants were advanced cancer patients assisted at home who were provided with a VR headset for 4days. On days one and four, anxiety and depression were measured by the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and pain by the Brief Pain Inventory (BPI). Before and after each VR session, symptoms were collected by the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS). Participants wore a smart wristband measuring physiological signals associated with pain, anxiety, and depression. Fourteen patients (mean age 47.2±14.2years) were recruited. Anxiety, depression (HADS), and pain (BPI) did not change significantly between days one and four. However, the ESAS items related to pain, depression, anxiety, well-being, and shortness of breath collected immediately after the VR sessions showed a significant improvement (p<0.01). A progressive reduction in electrodermal activity has been observed comparing the recordings before, during, and after the VR sessions, although these changes were not statistically significant. This brief research report supports the idea that VR could represent a suitable complementary tool for psychological treatment in advanced cancer patients assisted at home.

Highlights

  • Cancer significantly interferes in all aspects of daily life, from family and personal relationships to business and financial areas (Lentz et al, 2019; Schouten et al, 2019)

  • Starting from the hypothesis that Virtual reality (VR) can be used as an effective adjuvant intervention in home-palliative care (PC) to improve anxiety, depression, pain, and other symptoms in advanced cancer patients, this brief report describes the results obtained during the first 18 months of this ongoing experience

  • The Italian validated version of Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale (ESAS; Moro et al, 2006) is a simple and reliable multi-item instrument developed to rate the intensity of nine common symptoms experienced by cancer patients

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

Cancer significantly interferes in all aspects of daily life, from family and personal relationships to business and financial areas (Lentz et al, 2019; Schouten et al, 2019). Starting from the hypothesis that VR can be used as an effective adjuvant intervention in home-PC to improve anxiety, depression, pain, and other symptoms in advanced cancer patients, this brief report describes the results obtained during the first 18 months of this ongoing experience. This pre-post single-arm study aims to reach three objectives: i. To explore whether the two contents (i.e., interactive vs. non-interactive) can have a different effect on the cancerrelated symptomatology

Participants
RESULTS
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DATA AVAILABILITY STATEMENT
ETHICS STATEMENT
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