Effects of a Neuroscience-based Technique on Cancer Patients Announced of a Palliative Disease Progression and Partners (NeuroPrevPTSD)
Colorectal Cancer, Bladder Cancer, Prostate Cancer
About this trial
This is an interventional prevention trial for Colorectal Cancer focused on measuring PTSD, Memory Structuring Intervention (MSI), Cancer, Vagal breathing
Eligibility Criteria
Inclusion Criteria:
- Men or women aged over 18 years old;
- Who received in the last 7 days the diagnosis of metastatic incurable bladder, prostate, kidney, colorectal or sarcoma cancer (including recurrence) during the announcement visit;
- Whose life expectancy is estimated ≥ 6 months by their treating oncologist;
- Who have a WHO performance score < 3 (to be coherent with the life expectancy);
- Who have an albumin level > 30g/liter (patients with an acceptable state of nutrition);
- Who gave their signed consent to participate in the study;
- Who are covered by a social insurance.
Exclusion Criteria:
- Patients diagnosed with cerebral metastases;
- Patients with locally advanced cancer without metastases;
- Patients with an advanced or metastatic cancer amenable to curative intent treatment;
- Patients suffering from a psychological vulnerability that might alter their reasoning or judgment capacities;
- Patients with a psychological or physical incapacity to answer the questionnaires, attested by the medical staff;
- Patients under custodial sentence or under tutelage or protection of vulnerable adults
Sites / Locations
- Centre Oscar Lambret
Arms of the Study
Arm 1
Arm 2
Experimental
Other
Experimental arm
Control Arm
In the experimental group, participants will perform vagal breathing (VB), followed by the MSI, followed again by VB. The VB component will guide participants how to perform deep slow vagal breathing by inhaling and counting 1-5, holding their breath and counting 1-2, and exhaling and counting 1-5, during 2-5 minutes. The MSI component will teach participants to chronologically organize the segments of their memory of the incurable diagnosis, to verbally label feelings or somatic sensations they had at that moment, and to provide causal links between the event's segments and causality to their feelings and sensations, following the protocol of Gidron et al. (2001).
Participants in the control group will receive support and attention (usual care) and will be invited to recall announcement of the incurable disease progression. More precisely, they will be invited to express their associated thoughts and feelings, being free to talk about their experience, and the psychologist will react with empathy and support.