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Psychosocial Support for Cancer Patients

Completed
Conditions
Cancer
Interventions
Behavioral: Dignity Psychotherapy
Behavioral: Supportive Psychotherapy
Behavioral: Standard Palliative Care
Registration Number
NCT00133965
Lead Sponsor
Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center
Brief Summary

This is an international, 3-site trial (Winnipeg Canada, MSKCC NYC, Perth Australia) accruing 120 patients per site (120x3). The purpose of this study is to compare two types of counseling for cancer patients: "Dignity Psychotherapy" and "Supportive Psychotherapy" as well as "Standard Palliative Care." Many cancer patients seek counseling to help with the emotional burden of their illnesses. Counseling often helps them cope with cancer by giving them a place to express their feelings. We, the investigators at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, have developed a type of counseling we call "Dignity Psychotherapy." It is intended to help cancer patients maintain or enhance a sense of purpose, meaning, and overall quality of life, despite having cancer. "Supportive Psychotherapy" is another type of counseling intended to help patients feel more at ease and express and reflect on any feelings or concerns they might have about their illness. Both of these types of counseling will be compared to "Standard Palliative Care." We will look at how these types of treatments affect patients' mood, outlook, and quality of life. We also want to see how the type of treatment they receive affects their family members and significant others.

Detailed Description

Primary Objective:

* To establish the efficacy of a new and unique individual, brief intervention we call "Dignity Psychotherapy" in enhancing a sense of meaning, purpose and overall well-being for patients with advanced, end stage cancer.

Secondary Objectives:

* To compare the effectiveness of "Dignity Psychotherapy" with "Supportive Psychotherapy" and "Standard Palliative Care" in bolstering the patients' sense of meaning, purpose, generativity, and overall sense of dignity and quality of life, while lessening hopelessness, sense of being a burden to others, and suffering.

* To explore the impact "Dignity Psychotherapy" has on the bereavement experience of those family members/significant others taking part in this arm of the study protocol.

* To compare the bereavement experience of bereaved family members/significant others whose loved ones took part in any one of the three study conditions.

Recruitment & Eligibility

Status
COMPLETED
Sex
All
Target Recruitment
281
Inclusion Criteria
  • The patient must be at least 18 years of age (because of the nature of "Dignity Psychotherapy," which presumes a relatively advanced level of social and psychological development).
  • Have a terminal illness (Stage IV with a prognosis of less than 6 months, but expected to live at least 7 to 10 days, i.e. the average length of the protocol)
  • Must be able to identify a family member/significant other who agrees to participate in the study (in the case of "Dignity Psychotherapy," this family member/significant other will receive the generativity document)
  • Be able to communicate with an English-speaking therapist (patients who are visually impaired will be offered assistance with the consent forms and surveys)
  • In the investigator's judgement, participant is cognitively able to provide valid, informed consent.
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Exclusion Criteria
  • Significant psychiatric disturbance sufficient to preclude participation in a psychotherapeutic intervention (e.g. acute, severe psychiatric symptoms which would require individual treatment and medication management rather than a psychotherapy intervention).
  • Active psychotic mental disorder (e.g. schizophrenia, acute mania), or marked paranoid ideation. Patients who are on stable regimens of psychotropic medications (e.g. antidepressants for clinical depression) or who are in concurrent individual or group psychotherapy will not be excluded. This information regarding concurrent psychiatric treatment will be collected and utilized as a co-variate in data analysis.
  • Presence of a cognitive disturbance (i.e. delirium or dementia) sufficient to preclude participation in psychotherapy, and/or data collection.
  • Physical limitations or illness severity sufficient to preclude participation in psychotherapy
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Study & Design

Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Study Design
Not specified
Arm && Interventions
GroupInterventionDescription
1Dignity PsychotherapyDignity Psychotherapy
2Supportive PsychotherapySupportive Psychotherapy
3Standard Palliative CareStandard Palliative Care
Primary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To establish the efficacy of a new and unique individual, brief intervention called "Dignity Psychotherapy" in enhancing a sense of meaning, purpose and overall well-being for patients with advanced, end stage cancer7-10 days
Secondary Outcome Measures
NameTimeMethod
To compare the effectiveness of "Dignity Psychotherapy" with "Supportive Psychotherapy" and "Standard Palliative Care" in bolstering the patients' sense of meaning7-10 days
To explore the impact "Dignity Psychotherapy" has on the bereavement experience of those family members/significant others taking part in this arm of the study protocol7-10 days
To compare the bereavement experience of bereaved family members/significant others whose loved ones took part in any one of the three study conditionsSix to nine months following the death of the patient

Trial Locations

Locations (1)

Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center

🇺🇸

New York, New York, United States

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