Burns, Marcia F.Secinti, EkinJohns, Shelley A.Wu, WeiHelft, Paul R.Turk, Anita A.Loehrer, Patrick J.Sehdev, AmikarAl-Hader, Ahmad A.Mosher, Catherine E.2024-05-212024-05-212023Burns MF, Secinti E, Johns SA, et al. Impact of acceptance and commitment therapy on physical and psychological symptoms in advanced gastrointestinal cancer patients and caregivers: Secondary results of a pilot randomized trial. J Contextual Behav Sci. 2023;27:107-115. doi:10.1016/j.jcbs.2023.01.001https://hdl.handle.net/1805/40886Patients with advanced gastrointestinal cancer often experience high symptom burden, which is associated with heightened distress in both patients and their family caregivers. Few interventions have been tested to jointly address patient and caregiver symptoms in advanced gastrointestinal cancer. In a randomized pilot trial, telephone-based, dyadic acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) was found to be feasible in this population. The present secondary analyses examined the impact of this intervention on patient and caregiver physical and psychological symptoms. Patients and caregivers (N = 40 dyads) were recruited from clinics in Indianapolis, Indiana and randomized to either six weeks of telephone-based ACT or education/support, an attention control condition. Outcomes were assessed at baseline and at 2 weeks and 3 months post-intervention. Study group differences in outcomes were not statistically significant. However, when examining within-group change, only ACT patients experienced moderate reductions in pain severity and interference at 2 weeks post-intervention (effect size [ES]=−0.47; −0.51) as well as moderate reductions in depressive symptoms at 2 weeks (ES=−0.42) and 3 months (ES=−0.41) post-intervention. ACT caregivers experienced moderate reductions in sleep disturbance (ES=−0.56; −0.49) and cognitive concerns (ES=−0.61; −0.85) across follow-ups. Additionally, caregivers in both conditions experienced moderate reductions in fatigue (ES=−0.38 to −0.70) and anxiety (ES=−0.40 to −0.49) across follow-ups. Findings suggest that ACT may improve certain symptoms in dyads coping with advanced gastrointestinal cancer and warrant replication in a larger trial.en-USPublisher PolicyAcceptance and commitment therapyFamily caregiversMetastatic gastrointestinal cancerSymptomsDistressRandomized controlled trialImpact of acceptance and commitment therapy on physical and psychological symptoms in advanced gastrointestinal cancer patients and caregivers: Secondary results of a pilot randomized trialArticle