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Hypnosis for Patients Treated With Adjuvant Chemotherapy for Breast Cancer(HYPNOVAL)

I

Institut du Cancer de Montpellier - Val d'Aurelle

Status

Completed

Conditions

Breast Cancer

Treatments

Behavioral: hypnosis

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03250130
ICM-URC-2014/ 31

Details and patient eligibility

About

The main objective is to assess the feasibility of an intervention based on medical Ericksonian hypnosis as a complementary therapy in patients treated with surgery after a diagnosis of breast cancer, followed by an indication of adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy

Full description

In the field of management of cancer, many approaches have been used since tens of years, particularly in regard of pain management, both in achieving surgical or invasive procedures in the pain induced by the disease itself. the investigators owe the first description in 1829 Chapelin and col who used hypnosis in a patient with breast cancer in which a mastectomy should be performed. Meta-analysis (2000) showed the positive impact of analgesia obtained through hypnosis on the perception of pain intensity. In children in whom regular venous punctures is performed, using hypnosis seems indisputable on the management of anticipatory anxiety, leading to a better experience of the act itself. Regarding the nausea and vomiting induced by chemotherapy, numerous studies are old, not always randomized and performed often before the era of the setrons; but seems favorable impact on anticipated nausea and vomiting, the updated studies should emerge on the issue of delayed emesis which remain a serious adverse event and not completely resolved. Mark to improve the EORTC validated tools of quality of life measurement widely used for example in ovarian cancer.

The impact of hypnosis on the quality of life or the side effects of treatment or rehospitalization for toxicity remains controversial (Judson, 2011). A meta-analysis combining the tests carried out before and after the era of setrons (Richardson, 2007) concluded that the effectiveness of the anticipated nausea and vomiting.

In this context,the investigators proposed to conduct a feasibility study to evaluate the role and impact of medical Ericksonian hypnosis on acute and delayed adverse event (incl nausea and vomiting) in female patients treated by adjuvant chemotherapy for breast cancer.

The main objective is to assess the feasibility of an intervention based on medical Ericksonian hypnosis as a complementary therapy in patients treated with surgery after a diagnosis of breast cancer, followed by an indication of adjuvant chemotherapy and radiotherapy

Enrollment

35 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • • Female, age > 18 years-old

    • Without previous practice of hypnosis
    • Patient with diagnosis of breast cancer
    • Patient receiving an adjuvant chemotherapy for at least 3 months with an indication of radiotherapy after chemotherapy
    • Patient accepting the principle of the study with a signed written informed consent
    • Patient affiliated to French Social Security

Exclusion criteria

  • • Male

    • Age < 18 years
    • Patient refusing hypnosis
    • Pregnancy, breast-feeding, or lack of effective contraception in female patients with reproductive potential.
    • Patient with psychological or mental disorders under psychotropic treatments (lithium, neuroleptics)
    • Not ability to speak and read French, deaf and/or mute

Trial design

Primary purpose

Prevention

Allocation

N/A

Interventional model

Single Group Assignment

Masking

None (Open label)

35 participants in 1 patient group

Hypnosis
Experimental group
Description:
The patient achieve self-hypnosis sessions in these chemotherapy treatments
Treatment:
Behavioral: hypnosis

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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