Lung cancer is the leading cause of cancer mortality, posing a critical public health challenge in both Hong Kong and global populations. Patients with lung cancer frequently experience a distressing symptom cluster characterized by breathlessness-driven respiratory distress, accompanied by persistent cough and fatigue, which collectively impose a substantial disease burden. While our research team leader previously developed and validated a multi-component Respiratory Distress Symptom Intervention (RDSI) in England, demonstrating clinical efficacy for lung cancer management, its impact on psychological distress (anxiety and depression) proved limited. This limitation may reflect insufficient integration of psychological components, a crucial consideration given the well-established bidirectional relationship between respiratory symptoms and psychological distress. Emerging evidence indicates that mindfulness interventions provide dual therapeutic benefits by improving patient adherence and effectively addressing both physical symptoms, such as breathlessness and fatigue, as well as psychological distress, including anxiety and depression. Meanwhile, current evaluation methodologies have mainly focused on behavioral data collection, such as self-reported questionnaires, to reflect the effect before and after the intervention. Neuroimaging data can help understand the brain mechanisms underlying breathlessness and elucidate the effectiveness of interventions, thereby improving intervention strategies.
This study aims to develop and evaluate a mindfulness-oriented respiratory distress symptom intervention (M-RDSI) for patients with lung cancer. This study uses a two-phase experimental design to develop the M-RDSI and to evaluate the M-RDSI intervention's clinical and neurophysiological effects. In Phase I, the aim is to develop and content-validate the M-RDSI, including cultural adaptation adjustment and co-design of the M-RDSI intervention, including intervention teaching materials, through an expert panel consisting of patients with lung cancer and healthcare professionals. In Phase II, fifty participants will be randomized into the intervention group, receiving a 6-week M-RDSI intervention followed by a 12-week follow-up, or the control group, which will receive usual care during the same period. During Phase IIa, the feasibility, acceptability, and preliminary clinical outcomes will be evaluated. Feasibility will be assessed through recruitment, dropout, and retention rates. Acceptability will be measured by treatment adherence rates and participant satisfaction, gathered through qualitative interviews. Preliminary clinical effectiveness will include self-reported outcomes such as breathlessness, cough, fatigue, mindfulness, anxiety, depression, and quality of life. The generalized estimating equation will be employed to analyze the intervention effects. Additionally, one-on-one qualitative interviews will be conducted post-intervention to gather participants' feedback on the perceived effectiveness, acceptability, strengths, limitations, and suggestions for improving the M-RDSI program. In Phase IIb, a task-based fMRI will be conducted at baseline and post-intervention, using a set of breathlessness-related word cues as stimuli to assess changes in brain activity. Analysis will be corrected for multiple comparisons. A general linear model will be constructed for the first-level fMRI analysis. A 2-by-2 factorial ANOVA will assess the group-by-time interaction of brain activity, and a paired t-test will evaluate pre- and post-treatment changes within the intervention group for the group analysis.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
RANDOMIZED
Purpose
SUPPORTIVE_CARE
Masking
SINGLE
Enrollment
50
Patients in the M-RDSI group will receive a 6-week intervention and begin with a training session (ideally face-to-face at the cancer center or the research center or an online meeting as backup for around 60 minutes, including 1) mindfulness training, such as mindful breathing and relaxation; 2) controlled breathing techniques, cough suppression techniques, acupressure, and exercise; and 3) using mindful breathing, relaxation, and attitudes to orientate the practice of RDSI. A second group training session will be conducted 3 weeks later to review the intervention and discuss any questions participants may have. The training sessions will be delivered by a well-trained research assistant from experienced clinicians and the research team. Participants will be guided by the M-RDSI web-based educational materials (e.g., text, pictures, and videos) and a detailed intervention manual for their daily home practice.
Usual care will receive health educational booklets, including brief tips for symptom management designed by the research team, and routine follow-ups offered by the oncology nurse in the cancer center that patients with lung cancer usually receive.
The Hong Kong Polytechnic University
Hong Kong, Hong Kong
RECRUITINGRecruitment rate
The recruitment rate will be calculated as the percentage of eligible participants who enroll in the study out of the total number of eligible participants.
Time frame: Baseline
Retention rate
The retention rate will be calculated as the percentage of participants who completed the entire research process (including the follow-up) out of the initial recruitment number.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention and at 12-weeks follow-up
Drop-out rate
The drop-out rate will be calculated as the percentage of participants who voluntarily withdrew from the study out of the initial recruitment number.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention and at 12-weeks follow-up
Adherence rate
The adherence rate will be calculated as the percentage of participants who complete the 6-week intervention.
Time frame: Immediately after intervention
Participants' satisfaction
The participants' satisfaction will be assessed through one-to-one interviews by well-trained PhD students or research assistants.
Time frame: At 12-weeks follow-up
Breathlessness
This will be measured by the Dyspnoea-12. Participants will be asked to rate 12 items, with each item scored on a scale from 0 to 3. The total score ranges from 0 to 36, with higher scores indicating more severe symptoms of breathlessness.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Breathlessness expectation
This will be measured by the Breathlessness word cue set. Participants will be asked to rate 23 items using two Visual Analogue Scales: one for breathlessness and the other for breathlessness-anxiety. Each item ranges from 0% to 100%, with higher scores indicating greater levels of breathlessness or breathlessness-anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Cough
This will be measured by the Leicester Cough Questionnaire. Participants will be asked to rate 19 items, each scored on a scale from 1 to 7. The total score is calculated by converting the item scores, yielding a possible range from 3 to 21, with higher scores indicating less severe cough symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Fatigue
This will be measured by the Functional Assessment of Chronic Illness Therapy-Fatigue. Participants will be asked to rate 13 items, each scored on a five-point Likert scale from 0 to 4. The total score ranges from 0 to 52, with higher scores indicating less severe fatigue symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Mindfulness
This will be measured by the Mindful Attention Awareness Scale. Participants will be asked to rate 15 items, each scored on a six-point Likert scale from 1 to 6. The overall score is obtained by averaging the scores of all items, with higher mean scores indicating a greater level of mindfulness.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Depression
This will be measured by the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Participants will be asked to rate 20 items, each scored on a four-point Likert scale from 0 to 3. The total score ranges from 0 to 60, with higher scores indicating more severe depressive symptoms.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Anxiety
This will be measured by the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, which consists of two subscales: the State Anxiety Scale and the Trait Anxiety Scale. Each subscale contains 20 items, with each item scored on a four-point Likert scale from 1 to 4. The total score for each subscale ranges from 20 to 80, with higher scores indicating greater levels of state or trait anxiety.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Quality of life (QoL)
This will be measured by the EuroQoL 5-Dimension 5-Level. Participants will be asked to rate five domains-mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, and anxiety/depression. Each on a five-level scale ranging from no problems to extreme problems. Participants will also be asked to provide an overall assessment of their health using a visual analogue scale from 0 to 100, with higher visual analogue scale scores indicating better quality of life.
Time frame: Baseline, immediately after intervention, and at 12-weeks follow-up
Breathlessness expectation-related brain activity
A task-based fMRI technology will be used to measure breathlessness expectation using a breathlessness word cue set.
Time frame: Baseline and immediately after intervention.
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