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Trial Title:
Randomized Controlled Study Evaluating the Efficacy of Hypnosis in Nuclear Medicine
NCT ID:
NCT06116084
Condition:
Cancer
Myocarditis
Alzheimer Disease
Parkinson
Conditions: Official terms:
Alzheimer Disease
Myocarditis
Study type:
Interventional
Study phase:
N/A
Overall status:
Recruiting
Study design:
Allocation:
Non-Randomized
Intervention model:
Parallel Assignment
Primary purpose:
Supportive Care
Masking:
Single (Participant)
Intervention:
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
Ericksonian Hypnosis
Description:
An Ericksonian hypnosis session given to patients during a scintigraphic or PET
examination, in a conventional manner, i.e. the hypnotherapist (MERM) is close to the
patient in the examination room at the time of the session and communicates with him/her
without any special device dedicated to this purpose.
Arm group label:
Ericksonian hypnosis
Intervention type:
Other
Intervention name:
Hypnosis
Description:
A hypnosis session given to patients during a scintigraphic or PET examination, in a
remote manner, i.e. the hypnotherapist (MERM) is in the control room at the time of the
session and communicates with the patient via a microphone and the patient has
headphones.
Arm group label:
Experimental hypnosis
Summary:
In Nuclear Medicine, the examinations are long (20-60 minutes) and the patients must
remain immobile, sometimes fasting. The anxiety of the latter can lead to poor quality
examinations and sometimes, although already injected with radioactive drugs, the
patients refuse the examination. In imaging, the use of hypnosis (prior to the MRI
examination or with the patient during a scintigraphic examination) is frequent due to
the conformation of MRI or scintigraphic machines, particularly for claustrophobic
patients (2-2.5% of cases).
Medical electroradiology manipulators (MERM) have been trained to practice Ericksonian
hypnosis whose effectiveness in combating anxiety is no longer in question. Scientific
studies by Faymonville et al, 2006 and Rainville et al, 2002, have shown the
effectiveness of this method in managing anxiety using the simplified STAI-6 scale before
and after hypnosis.
The dosimetric study of the MERM position would then be greatly modified in favor of a
decrease in exposure targeted by the June 4, 2018 decree on personnel safety. The impact
of whether or not the MERM is physically present near the patient would also be studied.
If minimal, this will resolve the current contradiction between the quality of patient
care delivered and the radiation protection imposed in nuclear medicine.
The investigators propose here a pilot study evaluating remote-delivered Ericksonian
hypnosis versus conventionally-delivered Ericksonian hypnosis, which will allow for the
sizing of a subsequent multicenter randomized non-inferiority controlled trial. Indeed,
there is currently no data available on the non-inferiority margin of this technique.
Detailed description:
In Nuclear Medicine, the examinations are long (20-60 minutes) and the patients must
remain immobile, sometimes fasting. The anxiety of the latter can lead to poor quality
examinations and sometimes, although already injected with radioactive drugs, the
patients refuse the examination. In imaging, the use of hypnosis (prior to the MRI
examination or with the patient during a scintigraphic examination) is frequent due to
the conformation of MRI or scintigraphic machines, particularly for claustrophobic
patients (2-2.5% of cases).
Medical electroradiology manipulators (MERM) have been trained to practice Ericksonian
hypnosis whose effectiveness in combating anxiety is no longer in question. Scientific
studies by Faymonville and Rainville have shown the effectiveness of this method in
managing anxiety using the simplified STAI-6 scale before and after hypnosis.
During nuclear medicine examinations, the proximity of MERMs to patients to practice
conventional hypnosis results in significant exposure to radioactive radiation, which is
not compatible with radiation protection guidelines. Some MERMs have been practicing
hypnosis for several years, others are reluctant. However, exposure decreases as a
function of the decrease in exposure time and the distance to the radioactive source. If
the examination time cannot be modified, the distance to the patient could be by using an
original method, remote hypnosis using a headset and microphone to provide Ericksonian
hypnosis sessions in the same way as those provided in conventional sessions. The
dosimetric study of the MERM position would then be greatly modified in favor of a
decrease in exposure targeted by the June 4, 2018 decree on personnel safety. The impact
of whether or not the MERM is physically present near the patient would also be studied.
If minimal, this will resolve the current contradiction between the quality of patient
care delivered and the radiation protection imposed in nuclear medicine.
The investigators propose here a pilot study evaluating remote-delivered Ericksonian
hypnosis versus conventionally-delivered Ericksonian hypnosis, which will allow for the
sizing of a subsequent multicenter randomized non-inferiority controlled trial. Indeed,
there is currently no data available on the non-inferiority margin of this technique.
This pilot study will also allow for extensive documentation of the implementation of the
remote hypnosis technique and for any necessary adjustments to the intervention to ensure
its feasibility, acceptability, and reproducibility in the subsequent trial.
The hypothesis is that the use of remote-assisted hypnosis in nuclear medicine reduces
patient anxiety as much as conventional Ericksonian hypnosis, while limiting the
radiation exposure of the MERMs.
Criteria for eligibility:
Criteria:
Inclusion Criteria:
- Patient referred for a scan or PET scan
- Patient with a score > 11 on the STAI-6 scale.
- Person, speaking and understanding French
- Having received complete information on the organization of the research and having
signed the informed consent
- Age ≥ 18 years, and ≤ 80 years.
- Affiliated with a social security plan.
Exclusion Criteria:
- People who have taken an anxiolytic treatment before going to nuclear medicine.
- Persons referred for a neurological examination.
- People with cognitive or auditory problems, or with a major depressive episode.
- Persons with cardiac rhythm disorders (cardiac arrhythmias)
- Persons who cannot perform the examination for which they need a hypnosis session
- Women of childbearing age who do not have an effective means of contraception
- Person referred to in articles L. 1121-5, L. 1121-7 and L1121-8 of the public health
code (pregnant woman, parturient or nursing mother, adult person subject to a legal
protection measure (guardianship, curatorship, safeguard of justice, adult person
unable to express his consent).
- Person deprived of liberty by a judicial or administrative decision, subject to
psychiatric care under articles L. 3212-1 and L. 3213-1
Gender:
All
Minimum age:
18 Years
Maximum age:
80 Years
Healthy volunteers:
No
Locations:
Facility:
Name:
Nancy Hospital
Address:
City:
Vandoeuvre les Nancy
Zip:
54511
Country:
France
Status:
Recruiting
Contact:
Last name:
Véronique Roch
Email:
v.roch@chru-nancy.fr
Investigator:
Last name:
Martine Louis
Email:
Principal Investigator
Start date:
May 26, 2023
Completion date:
April 1, 2026
Lead sponsor:
Agency:
Central Hospital, Nancy, France
Agency class:
Other
Source:
Central Hospital, Nancy, France
Record processing date:
ClinicalTrials.gov processed this data on November 12, 2024
Source: ClinicalTrials.gov page:
https://clinicaltrials.gov/ct2/show/NCT06116084