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In patients operated for colorectal cancer, pain, anxiety and depression are important factors in postoperative rehabilitation. The use of new technologies, as virtual reality immersion, could further improve their postoperative management. To date, no study has evaluated the potential benefits of using virtual reality before and after colorectal cancer surgery. The main objective is to determine if virtual reality can reduce postoperative anxiety in patients undergoing colorectal cancer surgery.
To answer this question, the investigators plan to execute a randomized controlled, single-center, open-label, superiority interventional trial. Patients will be randomized into 2 parallel arms: 1 interventional "virtual immersion" arm and 1 "control" arm.
Patients with colorectal cancer, regardless of oncological stage, or a colorectal lesion deemed endoscopically unresectable, with an indication for elective surgical management by laparotomy or laparoscopy will be included.
For patients in the interventional arm, virtual reality headset is put on the day before the operation and in the morning just before going down to the operating theatre. Colorectal cancer surgery then proceeds as usual. In the postoperative period, virtual reality sessions are offered every day and on request without any limit in number. Virtual reality immersion offers a visual and auditory experience during a soothing journey through visual worlds filmed in natural environments. This is a purely contemplative mode, lasting maximum 30 minutes.
For the control arm, patients are treated according to the usual practices of the department and do not have access to virtual reality.
The main purpose is to show a greater decrease in anxiety in the interventional group by measuring the absolute difference between the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory scores before surgery and at discharge.
Full description
The investigators plan to execute a randomized controlled, single-center, open-label, superiority interventional trial. Patients will be randomized into 2 parallel arms: 1 interventional "virtual immersion" arm and 1 "control" arm.
Randomization (1:1) will be stratified by cancer type (colon vs rectum). The randomization list will be balanced by small blocks of different sizes, randomly alternated to make it unpredictable. The block sizes will be provided in the final study report. The randomization list will be created by a member of the Digestive and Oncological Surgery department not involved in the study and will be added in REDCap software.
Study process:
Note: measures of depression (CES-D, Center for Epidemiologic Studies - Depression - French version) and alcohol and tobacco consumption are included. These are indeed confounding factors of anxiety and potential moderating factors of virtual reality's effectiveness.
The main purpose is to show a greater decrease in anxiety in the interventional group by measuring the absolute difference between the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory scores before surgery and at discharge.
Sample size calculation:
The main analysis will be an intention-to-treat and per-protocol method. The primary endpoint will be compared between groups by linear regression adjusted for stratification factor and the STAI score at D-7. The application conditions will be checked by studying the residuals. No interim analysis is planned.
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124 participants in 2 patient groups
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Central trial contact
Natacha Nohilé; Yannick VACHER
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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