4.2 Article

Patient education integrated with acupuncture for relief of cancer-related fatigue randomized controlled feasibility study

Journal

Publisher

BMC
DOI: 10.1186/1472-6882-11-49

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Funding

  1. Susan G. Komen Breast Cancer Foundation [POP0504401]
  2. University of California [10FB-0049]
  3. Gerald Oppenheimer Family Foundation
  4. Annenberg Foundation
  5. UCLA Resource Center for Minority Aging Research/Center for Health Improvement in Minority Elderly (RCMAR/CHIME) [P30AG021684]
  6. UCLA/Drew Project EXPORT (NCMHD) [2P20MD000182]
  7. UCLA Older Americans Independence Center (NIH/NIA) [P30-AG028748]

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Background: Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is a prominent clinical problem. There are calls for multi-modal interventions. Methods: We assessed the feasibility of delivering patient education integrated with acupuncture for relief of CRF in a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) with breast cancer survivors using usual care as control. Social cognitive and integrative medicine theories guided integration of patient education with acupuncture into a coherent treatment protocol. The intervention consisted of two parts. First, patients were taught to improve self-care by optimizing exercise routines, improving nutrition, implementing some additional evidence-based cognitive behavioral techniques such as stress management in four weekly 50-minute sessions. Second, patients received eight weekly 50-minute acupuncture sessions. The pre-specified primary outcome, CRF, was assessed with the Brief Fatigue Inventory (BFI). Secondary outcomes included three dimensions of cognitive impairment assessed with the FACT-COGv2. Results: Due to difficulties in recruitment, we tried several methods that led to the development of a tailored recruitment strategy: we enlisted oncologists into the core research team and recruited patients completing treatment from oncology waiting rooms. Compared to usual care control, the intervention was associated with a 2.38-point decline in fatigue as measured by the BFI (90% Confidence Interval from 0.586 to 5.014; p < 0.10). Outcomes associated with cognitive dysfunction were not statistically significant. Conclusions: Patient education integrated with acupuncture had a very promising effect that warrants conducting a larger RCT to confirm findings. An effective recruitment strategy will be essential for the successful execution of a larger-scale trial.

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