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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT04698720

Contribution of Psychological Factors in the Healing of the Diabetic Foot Ulcer

Contribution of Psychological Factors in the Healing of the Diabetic Foot Ulcer, in Physiological Indicators of Healing Prognosis and Quality of Life: a Randomized Longitudinal Trial With a Nested Qualitative Study of Effectiveness Assessment

Status
Completed
Phase
N/A
Study type
Interventional
Enrollment
69 (actual)
Sponsor
University of Minho · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
18 Years
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Diabetic foot ulcers (DFU) are one of the most serious complications of diabetes and can lead to amputations in 85% of cases, resulting in physical, psychological, family, social and economic consequences. Research suggests that psychological factors may play an important role in DFU healing. Relaxation and hypnosis seem to contribute to faster wound healing. More research is needed to assess the effectiveness of different types of intervention on different types of wounds, in particular chronic wounds such as DFU. This study will evaluate the efficacy of relaxation and hypnosis, both with guided imagery, in DFU healing, physiological indicators (inflammatory, metabolic, oxidative stress, angiogenic, and miRNA biomarkers) of wound healing prognosis, and QoL, in patients with diabetic foot and a chronic ulcer. This study is a Randomized Controlled Study of a Psychological Intervention that aims to evaluate the efficiency of a muscle relaxation intervention with guided imagery (experimental group - EG1) compare to a hypnosis intervention with guided imagery (experimental group - EG2) and a neutral guided imagery placebo (active control group - ACG) and a group that does not receive any psychological intervention (passive control group - PCG). This study will also examine, qualitatively, the perspectives of patients with DFU on the relaxation and hypnosis interventions, in order to check its effectiveness; as well as the perspectives of informal caregivers on this adjuvant therapys. Participants must have a diagnosis of Diabetes Mellitus and Diabetic Foot; one or two chronic active ulcers at the time of assessment; and clinical levels of stress or anxiety or depression. Participants will be randomized by the four conditions - EG1, EG2, ACG and PCG - and assessed on the day of the first consultation or nursing treatment for chronic DFU (T0), two months later (T1), and six months later (T2; follow-up). Two weeks after T1, an interview will be conducted independently with patients that completed the relaxation, hypnosis, and placebo sessions, and with the informal caregivers who provided them the DFU care. The results of the present study will contribute for a better understanding of DFU progression, healing, prevention of re-ulceration and future amputations and, consequently, for the improvement of patients' quality of life.

Detailed description

General Aim: This RCT aims to assess the effectiveness of a muscle relaxation intervention with guided imagery (EG1) compared to hypnosis with guided imagery intervention (EG2) and a neutral guided imagery placebo (ACG) and a group that does not receive any psychological intervention (PCG), in DFU healing, physiological indicators of healing prognosis, and quality of life (QoL), in patients with diabetic foot and a chronic ulcer. This study will also examine, qualitatively, the perspectives of patients and their respective family caregivers regarding the interventions (EG1 and EG2) and placebo sessions in order to check the treatments' effectiveness. Specific aim: 1. To compare the impact of both experimental groups (EG1 and EG2) on psychological stress markers, in DFU healing, physiological indicators of healing prognosis, and QoL compared to the (PCG); between pre and post-intervention in the EG1 and EG2, controlling for clinical and sociodemographic variables, adherence to DFU care, and patients' literacy. Nested qualitative study specific aims: 2. To understand the perspectives of patients and family caregivers on the efficacy of EG1 and EG2 interventions versus ACG sessions to the DFU healing, comparing cases with a positive evolution (healing of the DFU) with cases with a negative evolution (DFU non-healing). Sample size calculation: Using Sakpal formula (2010), and according to the descriptive results of the pilot study (Ferreira et al., 2022), considering the difference in the mean (1.93) and standard deviation (6) of the treatment versus passive control groups, with a statistical power of 80% and a statistical significance level of 5%, a definitive RCT will require 152 participants. Considering a dropout rate for intervention sessions of 11%, a definitive RCT with four groups will require a sample of 169 participants, with 42 patients per group (Ferreira et al., 2022). Procedure: The doctor or nurse, in the medical appointment, identifies patients that meet the medical inclusion criteria. Patients are invited to participate in the study by the Researcher at the end of the medical appointment and are informed about the aims of the study and the voluntary nature of participation through an informed and informative consent. If patients agree to participate, they will sign the consent form. Nurses will then complete RESVECH 2.0 at the end of the appointment and doctors will complete the clinical questionnaire. Afterward, the Researcher will accompany the patient to a room provided by the Hospital in order to administer the battery of questionnaires in the interview format. After answering the questionnaires, the researcher will score the PSS and HADS instruments to confirm the presence of significant clinical levels of stress, anxiety or depression, and if the patient is eligible, at the end of that week, the participant will be randomized into one of four possible groups. In the next diabetic foot appointment, the respective participant will be informed about the group to which he or she has been allocated and whether will benefit, if appropriate, from four sessions of relaxation (EG1), hypnosis (EG2), or neutral guided imagery (ACG). If allocated to the PCG, the patient will not receive any psychological or placebo session. If the participant is available, the first session will take place on the same day. The following sessions will be scheduled according to the medical diabetic foot consultations. In each session, two assessments of blood pressure and heart rate will be performed, before starting the session and at the end of the session. At the end of the fourth session, the T1 assessment will be performed, with a new administration of the questionnaires. Six months after T0, the T2 (follow-up) evaluation will take place, with the last administration of the questionnaires. At T0, T1 and T2 a blood and DFU swab sample will be collected for the evaluation of the physiological variables. Plasma and peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC)s will be separated from the blood samples and frozen at -80ºC for analysis by the biochemical team member. Blood lymphocyte populations will be analyzed by flow cytometry and the quantification of blood cell populations will be performed by an automated hematological cell counter on fresh blood samples. The medical and nurse team member, as well as the lab technicians will not be aware of which group participants belong to. The interviews with patients who completed the four sessions of EG1, EG2, and ACG, as well as their informal caregivers, will be conducted separately, two weeks after T1, by a different researcher than the one involved in the sessions conduction, to reduce the bias of social desirability. Data analysis: All standard statistical analyses will be done using the Rstudio, R version 3.6.2 (R Core Team, 2019) and the SPSS statistics, v. 24.0 (IBM SPSS Statistics for Windows, IBM Corp, Armonk, New York). The baseline data of the treatments and control groups will be compared, using chi-squared test for binary variables and the t-test for continuous variables. The comparison between experimental groups (EG1 and EG2) and control groups (ACG and PCG) will be analyzed through Generalized Mixed Models. A semi-structured interview guide consisting of open-ended questions will be administered to approximately 12 patients that benefited from interventions (EG1, EG2) and placebo (ACG) sessions), and 12 informal caregivers indicated by those patients. This script will remain unchanged throughout the interviews. The audio recording of the interviews will be done using a tablet, transcribed verbatim, and anonymized in order to safeguard participants and data confidentiality. The transcripts of the interviews will be analyzed in the same order as conducted, using the thematic content analysis technique, and the NVivo software (QSR International PtyLtd, 2018).

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
BEHAVIORALMuscle Relaxation with Guided ImageryRelaxation intervention session begins with diaphragmatic breathing, followed by Jacobson's progressive muscle relaxation, which involves the contraction and subsequent relaxation of the 16 muscle groups of the body (forearm, arm, upper forehead, eye, mouth, jaw and throat, neck, shoulder, chest, stomach, thigh, leg and foot).The contraction is performed for 7 seconds while the relaxation lasts for about 40 to 50 seconds.The relaxation of the foot muscle group is only performed on the healthy foot, because dressing and bandages may bandage the foot with the DFU, which together with the typical joint stiffness of the diabetic foot, make it difficult to perform. After muscle relaxation, begins the guided imagery focused on DFU healing. The patient is instructed to think about his/her current state of health and to imagine the DFU as a dark area and the healing relaxation as a light associated to pleasant sensations, which will focus on the foot with DFU to heal it.
BEHAVIORALHypnosis with Guided ImageryIn the beginning of the first session we apply the Eye-Roll Test for Hypnotizability of Herbert Spiegel. Each session follows the Hypnotic Protocol with the following steps:Pre-talk/Absortion/Ratification/Aliciation/Dissociation/Awakening. The four sessions train the participants in visual, auditory and kinesthetic perception on ulcer healing. The protocol also promotes medical treatment acceptance.
BEHAVIORALNeutral Guided ImageryThis placebo consists of neutral guided imagery focused on themes of the patient's daily life before having DFU. Each session has a theme associated with the patient's life - family, work, friends, and leisure. Initially, the patient is asked to think about an event related to the theme of the session of his/her choice, positive or negative, which occurred before patient has the current DFU. Then, the patient is asked about a number of questions regarding the chosen episode in order to promote a more detailed reconstruction of the event. The patient is asked to imagine according to the instructions given by the Psychologist. When the whole episode is remembered, the patient is asked to tell what he or she imagined/remembered regarding each of the questions.

Timeline

Start date
2019-02-01
Primary completion
2021-12-31
Completion
2022-07-25
First posted
2021-01-07
Last updated
2024-05-08

Locations

3 sites across 1 country: Portugal

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT04698720. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.

Contribution of Psychological Factors in the Healing of the Diabetic Foot Ulcer (NCT04698720) · Clinical Trials Directory