The study, set to take place at Gold Coast University Hospital in Australia, will be conducted as a randomized controlled trial. Patients preparing for gynecological cancer surgery will be recruited and randomly assigned to one of two groups: those who will receive standard care plus a virtual reality (VR) intervention, and those who will receive only standard care. Standard care encompasses the usual pre-operative procedures and support provided by the hospital staff. We hypothesize that immersing patients in a preparatory virtual environment that shows them what they are to expect during their upcoming hospital stay for surgery, could help reduce their anxiety levels.
The study objective is to determine whether exposure to the operating theatre suite via virtual reality (VR) for patients undergoing gynecologic-oncological surgery reduces pre-operative anxiety. After patients are recruited, their anxiety level is measured by a simple 6-item visual anxiety scale (T0). Patients are then randomized into either receiving care-as-usual (CAU), or CAU combined with a VR experience (\~3.5 minutes; with background music and narration) where they are familiarized with the environment they will encounter during their stay for their cancer operation. Anxiety is measured again (T1). Days/weeks later, when patients are back in the hospital for their surgery (T2), anxiety is measured again in the preanesthetic bay, before receiving any anesthetics. Personnel collecting the anxiety scale at T2 will be unaware whether a patient had received the VR intervention or not. Randomization will be performed by a person unrelated to the study by using a computerized randomization tool to generate an allocation list and inserting paper slips with the group allocation into consecutively numbered, opaque envelopes which are opened, in order, at the time of randomization. Using a two-sided Wilcoxon-Mann-Whitney test and targeting a power of 80% at a significance level α of 0.05, abd assuming a clinically relevant difference in the anxiety scale of at least one "face" (i.e. at least 1 point on the 6-item scale) between the two groups and a within-group standard deviation of 1.6 (effect size: 0.625), sample size was determined as 34 patients per group for a 1:1 group allocation. Assuming a drop out/lost-to-follow up rate of up to 15%, 80 patients (40 per group) are to be recruited. Descriptive statistic analysis will be performed. Within-group and between-group assessements will be done using Wilcoxon signed rank test and the Mann-Whitney rank sum test, respectively.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
DOUBLE
Enrollment
80
An immersive VR experience, delivered using a VR head-mounted display, of the real-world environment at the hospital, featuring the pre-operative admission suite, pre-anesthetic bay, operating theatre, postoperative recovery room, and medical staff.
Gold Coast University Hospital
Southport, Queensland, Australia
Anxiety
Anxiety level measured by a 6-item visual scale (1 .. least anxiety, 6 ... highest anxiety)
Time frame: T0 (before randomization), T1 (same day as T0, but after care as usual +/- VR; usually inside 1 hour), T2 (days/weeks later, before surgical procedure - exact gap is unknown; expected: >3 days, median around 4-7 weeks)
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