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Internet‐administered, low‐intensity cognitive behavioral therapy for parents of children treated for cancer: A feasibility trial (<scp>ENGAGE</scp>)

Ella Thiblin, Joanne Woodford, Christina Reuther, Johan Lundgren, Nina Lutvica, Louise von Essén

2022Cancer Medicine18 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Parents of children treated for cancer may experience mental health difficulties, such as depression and anxiety. There is a lack of evidence-based psychological interventions for parents, with psychological support needs unmet. An internet-administered, guided, low-intensity cognitive behavioral therapy-based (LICBT) self-help intervention may provide a solution. METHODS: The feasibility and acceptability of such an intervention was examined using a single-arm feasibility trial (ENGAGE). Primary objectives examined: (1) estimates of recruitment and retention rates; (2) feasibility and acceptability of data collection instruments and procedures; and (3) intervention feasibility and acceptability. Clinical outcomes were collected at baseline, post-treatment (12 weeks), and follow-up (6 months). RESULTS: The following progression criteria were met: sample size was exceeded within 5 months, with 11.0% enrolled of total population invited, study dropout rate was 24.0%, intervention dropout was 23.6%, missing data remained at ≤10% per measure, and no substantial negative consequences related to participation were reported. Intervention adherence was slightly lower than progression criteria (47.9%). CONCLUSION: Findings suggest an internet-administered, guided, LICBT self-help intervention may represent a feasible and acceptable solution for parents of children treated for cancer. With minor study protocol and intervention modifications, progression to a pilot randomized controlled trial (RCT) and subsequent superiority RCT is warranted.

Topics & Concepts

MedicineRandomized controlled trialPsychological interventionAnxietyIntervention (counseling)PopulationDropout (neural networks)Cognitive behavioral therapyClinical trialMental healthClinical psychologyPhysical therapyPsychiatryInternal medicineComputer scienceMachine learningEnvironmental healthChildhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of LifeFamily Support in IllnessCancer survivorship and care
Internet‐administered, low‐intensity cognitive behavioral therapy for parents of children treated for cancer: A feasibility trial (<scp>ENGAGE</scp>) | Litcius