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Feasibility and pilot testing of a personalized eHealth intervention for pain science education and self-management for breast cancer survivors with persistent pain: a mixed-method study

Authors :
An De Groef
Margaux Evenepoel
Sophie Van Dijck
Lore Dams
Vincent Haenen
Louise Wiles
Mark Catley
Anna Vogelzang
Ian Olver
Peter Hibbert
Bart Morlion
G. Lorimer Moseley
Lauren C. Heathcote
Mira Meeus
De Groef, An
Evenepoel, Margaux
Van Dijck, Sophie
Dams, Lore
Haenen, Vincent
Wiles, Louise
Catley, Mark
Vogelzang, Anna
Olver, Ian
Hibbert, Peter
Morlion, Bart
Moseley, G Lorimer
Meeus, Mira
Heathcote, Lauren C
Source :
Supportive care in cancer
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Germany : Springer, 2023.

Abstract

Refereed/Peer-reviewed Purpose: Here, we describe the development and pilot study of a personalized eHealth intervention containing a pain science education program and self-management support strategies regarding pain and pain-related functioning in female survivors of breast cancer. First, we aimed to evaluate the eHealth intervention’s acceptability, comprehensibility, and satisfaction; second, we aimed to assess its preliminary efficacy. Methods: A mixed-method study design was used. Breast cancer survivors with persistent pain were recruited. After 6 weeks of engagement with the eHealth intervention, acceptability, comprehensibility, and satisfaction were measured quantitatively with a self-constructed questionnaire and described qualitatively using focus groups. A joint display was used to present the meta-interferences between data. Efficacy was assessed via mixed effects models with repeated measures (outcomes assessed at baseline, 6 weeks, and 12 weeks). Results: Twenty-nine women with persistent pain after breast cancer surgery participated. Overall, the eHealth program was well received and experienced as easy to use and helpful. The eHealth intervention seems useful as an adjunct to comprehensive cancer aftercare. Efficacy estimates suggested a significant improvement in pain-related functioning, physical functioning, and quality of life. Conclusion: A personalized eHealth intervention appears valuable for persistent pain management after breast cancer surgery. A large controlled clinical trial to determine effectiveness, and a full process evaluation, seems warranted.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09414355
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Supportive care in cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4f26632bbf78e30c62fe456010df83fc