PREPARE - PREoPerative Anxiety REduction
- Conditions
- Anxiety DisorderSurgery
- Interventions
- Behavioral: Psychological intervention
- Registration Number
- NCT03408002
- Brief Summary
The study aims to verify if a short individual psychological intervention might increase perceived self-efficacy in managing preoperative anxiety in patients who will undergo pancreatic surgery. It is a randomized clinical trial where half of participants will attend a psychological intervention based on "the four elements protocol" by Elan Shapiro the day before surgery, while the other half will follow usual care.
- Detailed Description
Patients who have to undergo surgery experience multiple sources of stress. A recent narrative review carried out on 115 studies by Powell et al. (2016) reported different and inconsistent findings on the relation between psychological interventions and surgery outcomes, due to the heterogeneity of these interventions, mainly based on information giving and patient education, and the very different samples of patients considered. Some evidences showed that pre-operative psychological interventions may contribute to reduce post-operative pain, duration of hospital stay (mean difference of 0.52 days) and negative affect. No studies were conducted with patients who had to undergo pancreatic surgery nor specific psychological interventions were devoted to increase self-efficacy in managing anxiety.
The aim of the present study is to verify if a short individual psychological intervention devoted to improve patient's ability to manage anxiety could increase his/her confidence to cope with pancreatic surgery, either in terms of perceived self-efficacy (main outcome) or less state anxiety reported on STAI-Y1 scale. Post-surgery outcomes are also collected: pain reported during the days following surgical intervention, length of hospital stay and number and type of clinical complications.
The study will involve 400 patients randomly divided in two arms and it is organized in four phases: T0,T1,T2,T3.
T0: Once obtained the informed consent, demographic information will be collected using a structured questionnaire. Clinical variables will be collected by self-administered tools, for which patients can ask support, if needed.
T1: The day before surgery, all patients will indicate their perceived self-efficacy in managing anxiety and will fulfil specific anxiety scales.
T2: after randomization, patients in the experimental group will participate to the psychological intervention, whereas the control group will follow usual care.
T3: After surgery pain, length of hospital stay and the number of post-operative complications within 30 days will be evaluated as secondary outcomes on all patients.
Recruitment & Eligibility
- Status
- COMPLETED
- Sex
- All
- Target Recruitment
- 400
- 18 - 80 years old
- cognitively able to give personal consent to participate to the study
- to be scheduled to have general anaesthesia for pancreatic surgery
- age under 18 years and over 80 years
- cognitively unable to give personal consent to participate to the study
- postponement of surgical operation
Study & Design
- Study Type
- INTERVENTIONAL
- Study Design
- PARALLEL
- Arm && Interventions
Group Intervention Description Psychological intervention Psychological intervention Psychological intervention using the "Four elements" technique elaborated by Shapiro and reported in M. Luber (2009) during a psychological consultation conducted the day before surgery.
- Primary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Change of Perceived self-efficacy, comparing the score on analogue scale (range 1-10) before (baseline) and after the psychological intervention in the experimental group. Perceived self-efficacy will be measured before (baseline) and immediately after the psychological intervention (up to 1 hour) in the experimental group, whereas in the control group it will be measured only once (baseline). To measure perceived self-efficacy, patients respond to the following question: "We kindly ask you to indicate on a scale from 1 to 10 how much you perceive to be able to manage anxiety before the surgery".
- Secondary Outcome Measures
Name Time Method Number of perioperative complications 30 days Description of the number and type of post-operative complications
Number of days of hospitalization From date of hospital admission until the date of discharge or date of death from any cause, whichever came first, assessed up to 6 months. Exact number of hospitalization days for each patient
VAS-P Visual Analogue Scale of Pain. from the 3rd day until 5th day after surgery VAS-P is a visual analogue scale where number 0 represents "absence of pain" and number 10 indicates "the worse pain ever tried". To measure perceived postoperative pain, patients respond to the following question: "We kindly ask you to indicate on a scale from 0 to 10 the intensity of your pain".The scale has no standardized scores or cut-off. Each patient applies his or her own "yardstick" in answering questions. Lower values are considered a better outcome.
Post-operative pain measured by the Brief Pain Inventory 3rd day after surgery It is a brief questionnaire composed which evaluates the intensity of perceived pain during the last 24 hours. The patient indicates on a human figure where is located the pain and its intensity on an analogue scale (range 1-10), then the patient responds to seven questions asking how this pain interferes with general activities, work, mood, ability to walk, quality of slumber and social relationships.
Trial Locations
- Locations (1)
Azienda Ospedaliera Universitaria Integrata
🇮🇹Verona, Italy