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ENROLLING BY INVITATION
NCT04165460
NA

Effect of Two Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions on Cervical Cancer Patients

Sponsor: National Institute of Cancerología

View on ClinicalTrials.gov

Summary

Cancer represents the second cause of death in general population worldwide and according to statistics, it is expected to increase in the next 20 years. Cervical cancer is the fourth cause of morbidity and mortality among women around the world. Late diagnosis and treatment indices several emotional reactions in patients leading to psychological disorders with an impact in quality of life. Anxiety and depression are the most frequent emotional reactions in cancer patients, which may vary depending on psychosocial factors such as coping and family support, mostly provided by the primary caregiver. Despite the high psychological morbidity in cancer patients, it is estimated that, among those patients needing psychological support, only 10% receive such interventions. A growing interest on psychological interventions in oncology has increased in the last 40 years, however, scarce investigations have been performed, especially in cervical cancer patients. The Cognitive-Behavioral Therapy has proven to be beneficial in general cancer population decreasing the psychological symptoms and improving the quality of life. Thus, the aim of this study is to evaluate the effect of two Cognitive-Behavioral psychological interventions on anxiety, depression, coping, therapeutic adherence, sexual satisfaction and quality of life of cervical cancer patients with locally-advanced and advanced disease attended at the National Cancer Institute from Mexico. Psychological intervention will be provided during ten weekly sessions including psychoeducation, relaxation, cognitive restructuring and problem solving with a pretest, posttest performed one week after intervention, and finally a follow up after three months after finishing the psychological intervention.

Official title: Effect of Two Cognitive-Behavioral Interventions on Psychosocial Factors and Quality of Life of Cervical Cancer Patients With Locally-advanced and Advanced Disease

Key Details

Gender

FEMALE

Age Range

18 Years - Any

Study Type

INTERVENTIONAL

Enrollment

92

Start Date

2020-03-02

Completion Date

2025-12-31

Last Updated

2025-05-28

Healthy Volunteers

No

Interventions

OTHER

Psychoeducation

Delivering systematic information about cancer, oncological treatment and efficient coping strategies.

OTHER

Relaxation

Teaching the patient in diaphragmatic breathing retraining and passive relaxation with guided imagination.

OTHER

Cognitive Restructuring

Teaching the patient to identify dysfunctional cognitions about cancer and oncological treatment that trigger maladaptive emotions and behavior. Then, focus in generating alternative thoughts through contrast with empirical reality based on the Beck Model.

OTHER

Solving Problems

To generate alternative solutions to practical problems based on the model described by Nezu.

Locations (1)

Instituto Nacional de Cancerologia

Mexico City, Tlalpan, Mexico