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Study of the Impact of Non-pharmacological Techniques on Cognitive Complaints in Cancer Patients

U

University of Liege

Status

Withdrawn

Conditions

Non-Metastatic Neoplasm

Treatments

Behavioral: Self-hypnosis/self-care

Study type

Interventional

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT05943301
2018/204

Details and patient eligibility

About

Cancer diagnosis generates a number of physical (pain, nausea and fatigue) and psychological implications for the patient. At the psychological level, there are high levels of emotional distress (anxiety and depression) and cognitive impairments such as memory, attentional and information processing deficits, that can undermine the quality of life. This last decade has shown great progress in cancer treatment allowing cancer patients, many of whom are of working age, to survive. Unfortunately, cancer diagnosis and treatment induce various symptoms necessitating the patient to interrupt or quit his occupational status. Hypnosis has been used in the past few years to treat these psychological and physical symptoms, be it at the moment of diagnosis, during and/or after the cancer treatments. A large amount of studies has shown a positive effect of hypnosis in cancer patients notably upon anxiety, emotional distress and fatigue, three factors that can negatively affect cognitive functions. The purpose of our study is to investigate the effect of a non-pharmacological treatment that combines self-hypnosis and self-care on well-being, cognitive complaints and return-to- work within a population of cancer patients. Our hypothesis is that, by reducing emotional distress and fatigue, self-hypnosis/self-care will reduce the cognitive difficulties of cancer patients, foster return-to-work, and eventually improve the patients' global quality of life.

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Major
  • Fluency in French
  • End of surgery and/or chimiotherapy and/or radiotherapy : 1-12 months.
  • Cognitive complaints

Exclusion criteria

  • Brain cancer
  • Metastatic cancer
  • Psychiatric disorder
  • Neurologic disorder
  • Neuropsychological assessment made within 3 months
  • Drug addiction
  • Alcoholism

Trial design

Primary purpose

Supportive Care

Allocation

Randomized

Interventional model

Crossover Assignment

Masking

Single Blind

0 participants in 2 patient groups

Experimental group
Experimental group
Description:
Self-hypnosis/self-care intervention : It is an 8-week 2 hour-session (one session per week) of self-hypnosis/ self-care learning. Participants are given strategies to learn self-care (knowing your own needs, self-respect, communication, etc.), each strategie is discussed for participant to understand them and thus applie them correctly in daily living. An hypnosis exercice is also realised at the end of each session.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Self-hypnosis/self-care
Control group
No Intervention group
Description:
The control goup has usual care and no intervention.

Trial contacts and locations

2

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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