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Published in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship 6/2019

01-12-2019 | Review

Psychosocial interventions for cancer survivors: A meta-analysis of effects on positive affect

Authors: John M. Salsman, James E. Pustejovsky, Stephen M. Schueller, Rosalba Hernandez, Mark Berendsen, Laurie E. Steffen McLouth, Judith T. Moskowitz

Published in: Journal of Cancer Survivorship | Issue 6/2019

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Abstract

Purpose

Positive affect has demonstrated unique benefits in the context of health-related stress and is emerging as an important target for psychosocial interventions. The primary objective of this meta-analysis was to determine whether psychosocial interventions increase positive affect in cancer survivors.

Methods

We coded 28 randomized controlled trials of psychosocial interventions assessing 2082 cancer survivors from six electronic databases. We calculated 76 effect sizes for positive affect and conducted synthesis using random effects models with robust variance estimation. Tests for moderation included demographic, clinical, and intervention characteristics.

Results

Interventions had a modest effect on positive affect (g = 0.35, 95% CI [0.16, 0.54]) with substantial heterogeneity of effects across studies (\( \hat{\tau}=0.40 \); I2 = 78%). Three significant moderators were identified: in-person interventions outperformed remote interventions (P = .046), effects were larger when evaluated against standard of care or wait list control conditions versus attentional, educational, or component controls (P = .009), and trials with survivors of early-stage cancer diagnoses yielded larger effects than those with advanced-stage diagnoses (P = .046). We did not detect differential benefits of psychosocial interventions across samples varying in sex, age, on-treatment versus off-treatment status, or cancer type. Although no conclusive evidence suggested outcome reporting biases (P = .370), effects were smaller in studies with lower risk of bias.

Conclusions

In-person interventions with survivors of early-stage cancers hold promise for enhancing positive affect, but more methodological rigor is needed.

Implications for Cancer Survivors

Positive affect strategies can be an explicit target in evidence-based medicine and have a role in patient-centered survivorship care, providing tools to uniquely mobilize human strengths.
Appendix
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Metadata
Title
Psychosocial interventions for cancer survivors: A meta-analysis of effects on positive affect
Authors
John M. Salsman
James E. Pustejovsky
Stephen M. Schueller
Rosalba Hernandez
Mark Berendsen
Laurie E. Steffen McLouth
Judith T. Moskowitz
Publication date
01-12-2019
Publisher
Springer US
Published in
Journal of Cancer Survivorship / Issue 6/2019
Print ISSN: 1932-2259
Electronic ISSN: 1932-2267
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-019-00811-8

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