Breast Cancer Clinical Trial

Impact of Acceptance and Commitment Therapy on Early Stage Breast Cancer

Summary

The purpose of this randomized controlled trial is to evaluate the effectiveness of an empirically supported psychosocial treatment, Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, in facilitating improved quality of life, benefit-finding, and cortisol rhythm in breast cancer patients in an outpatient clinical oncology setting.

View Full Description

Full Description

Previous research indicates that breast cancer patients may demonstrate disrupted diurnal cortisol rhythms compared to healthy individuals, and that these disrupted rhythms may be related to recurrence and earlier mortality in some patients. Interestingly, improvements in cortisol regulation in previous intervention studies for cancer patients have not necessarily been related to decreased distress. Rather, improvements in post-traumatic growth, benefit-finding, and meaningfulness have also accounted for improved neuroendocrine and immunological changes.

Traditional breast cancer groups, however, may not adequately address these areas because existing interventions often target the reduction of distress as the primary vehicle to improve psychosocial, quality of life, and biophysical outcomes. Acceptance and Commitment Therapy (ACT) is an empirically-supported, mindfulness-based psychological treatment that has been shown to enhance meaningful behavior change thorough increasing emotional acceptance of difficult psychological experiences such as distress, without the goal of changing or eliminating them.

The current study seeks to determine the preliminary effect of an 8-week ACT group in increasing positive life changes and corresponding increase in salivary cortisol slope in 40 distressed breast cancer patients, who will be randomly assigned to ACT or a wait list control group.

The hypotheses for the present study include:

Patients receiving ACT will demonstrate improvements in Quality of Life (QoL), Benefit-finding (BF), and health behavior compared to control group participants
ACT participants will demonstrate improvements in mean cortisol levels and cortisol reactivity compared to control group participants
These changes will be the result of increased mindful acceptance of cancer-related distress and meaningful behavior changes, rather than a reduction in distress.

View Eligibility Criteria

Eligibility Criteria

Inclusion Criteria:

diagnosis of stage I-III breast cancer
prescreen distress score above defined cutoff
agreement not to seek other breast cancer support services until study completion

Exclusion Criteria:

previous cancer
prior psychiatric treatment for serious mental health disorder (e.g., hospitalization or formal diagnosis of psychosis, major depressive episode, borderline mental retardation, suicidality, or current substance dependence)
current use of medications known to interfere with cortisol levels (e.g., dexamethasone)
major concurrent medical disease

Study is for people with:

Breast Cancer

Estimated Enrollment:

40

Study ID:

NCT01164930

Recruitment Status:

Completed

Sponsor:

San Jose State University

Check Your Eligibility

Let’s see if you might be eligible for this study.

What is your age and gender ?

Submit

There is 1 Location for this study

See Locations Near You

San Jose State University
San Jose California, 95192, United States

How clear is this clinincal trial information?

Study is for people with:

Breast Cancer

Estimated Enrollment:

40

Study ID:

NCT01164930

Recruitment Status:

Completed

Sponsor:


San Jose State University

How clear is this clinincal trial information?

×

Introducing, the Journey Bar

Use this bar to access information about the steps in your cancer journey.

Please confirm you are a US based health care provider:

Yes, I am a health care Provider No, I am not a health care provider