Buffart, L.M., van Uffelen, J. G., Riphagen, I. I., Brug, J., van Mechelen, W., Brown, W. J., & Chinapaw, M. J. (2012). Physical and psychosocial benefits of yoga in cancer patients and survivors, a systematic review and meta-analysis of randomized controlled trials. BMC Cancer, 12, 559.

DOI Link

Purpose

STUDY PURPOSE: Evaluate effects of yoga on physical and psychosocial symptoms
TYPE OF STUDY:  Meta Analysis & Systematic Review

Search Strategy

DATABASES USED: AMED, CINAHL, British Nursing Index, CENTRAL, EMBASE, PEDro, psycINFO, PubMed and SPORT-Discus
KEYWORDS:  States detailed search profiles available on request
INCLUSION CRITERIA:  RCT, adults with any cancer diagnosis, yoga intervention including physical postures, control group non exercise
EXCLUSION CRITERIA:  Yoga included as part of a larger intervention such as mindfulness based stress reduction were excluded

Literature Evaluated

TOTAL REFERENCES RETRIEVED : N = 1909
EVALUATION METHOD AND COMMENTS ON LITERATURE USED Study method quality evaluated using a Delphi list previously developed and tested.  Low quality defined as <50% of possible total score.

Sample Characteristics

FINAL NUMBER STUDIES INCLUDED; N(studies)  =  13
SAMPLE RANGE ACROSS STUDIES, TOTAL PATIENTS INCLUDED IN REVIEW:  Range 18-128
KEY SAMPLE CHARACTERISTICS:  12 studies involved breast cancer patients, 1 was in lymphoma

Phase of Care and Clinical Applications

PHASE OF CARE:  Multiple phases of care

Results

Physical outcomes: Pain was evaluated in 4 studies, meta analysis of 2 of these showed a large effect size (d=-0.63, 95% CI -0.98, -0.31)
Psychosocial outcomes: Reduced anxiety (d=-0.77; 095% CI -1.08, -0.46) fatigue (d=-.051, 95% CI -0.79,-0.22)  Effects on sleep disturbance were small and insignificant.
Dropout rates ranged from 0-38%
Interventions ranged from planned 6 -15 sessions.  Some studies involved supervised yoga classes, and some involved home practice only.  Studies involved patients in active treatment and others involved cancer survivors who had completed treatment.

Conclusions

Findings suggest that yoga may be helpful to reduce anxiety and fatigue in patients with cancer.

Limitations

States 3 studies included participant blinding or double blinding – it is unclear how a participant would not know they were receiving a yoga intervention.  Varied methods of measurement were used in the studies included – there is no description of how these were handled in meta analysis.  There is no report of heterogeneity findings.   Most studies were very small sample sizes.  There was a wide range of drop -out rates and no information about how this was handled in analysis.  Studies did not include attentional control conditions, so it is unclear how much effect was due to group support versus the actual yoga activity.  No differentiation was made between group session interventions versus patients who did home practice alone after instruction.

Nursing Implications

Findings do not provide strong support for effectiveness of yoga for sleep.  Findings do suggest that yoga may be helpful for patients to reduce anxiety and fatigue.  Nurses can support involvement in this type of activity for patients who are interested in participating in yoga.

Legacy ID

3978