Content » Vol 46, Issue 8

Original report

Effectiveness of integrated multidisciplinary rehabilitation in primary brain cancer survivors in an Australian community cohort: A controlled clinical trial

Fary Khan, Bhasker Amatya, Kate Drummond, Mary Galea
Department of Rehabilitation Medicine, Royal, Melbourne Hospital, 34-54 Poplar Road, Parkville, Melbourne VIC 3052, Australia. E-mail: fary.khan@mh.org.au
DOI: 10.2340/16501977-1840

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate effectiveness of a multidisciplinary rehabilitation program for persons following definitive primary brain tumour treatment in a community cohort.
Methods: The brain tumour (glioma) survivors (n = 106) were allocated either to the treatment group (n = 53) (intensive ambulatory multidisciplinary rehabilitation), or the waitlist control group (n = 53). The primary outcome – Functional Independence Measure (FIM), measured ‘Activity’ limitation; secondary measures included Depression, Anxiety Stress Scale, Perceived Impact Problem Profile and Cancer Rehabilitation Evaluation System. Assessments were at baseline, 3 and 6 months after program completion.
Results: Participants were predominantly women (56%), with mean age 51 years (standard deviation 13. 6) and median
time since diagnosis of 2. 1 years. Intention-to-treat analysis showed a significant difference between groups at 3-month in favour of multidisciplinary rehabilitation program in FIM motor subscales: ‘self-care’, ‘sphincter’, ‘locomotion’, ‘mobility’(p < 0. 01 for all); and FIM ‘communication’ (p < 0. 01) and ‘psychosocial’ subscales (p < 0. 05), with small to moderate effect size (r = 0. 2–0. 4). At 6-month follow-up, significant improvement in the treatment group was maintained only for FIM ‘sphincter’, ‘communication’ and ‘cognition’ subscales (p < 0. 01 for all). No difference between groups was noted in other subscales.
Conclusions: brain tumour survivors can improve function with multidisciplinary rehabilitation, with some gains maintained up to 6 months. Evidence for specific interventions in the ‘blackbox’ of rehabilitation is needed.

Lay Abstract

Comments

Do you want to comment on this paper? The comments will show up here and if appropriate the comments will also separately be forwarded to the authors. You need to login/create an account to comment on articles. Click here to login/create an account.