Nursing Interventions Targeting Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review
Abstract
:1. Introduction
1.1. Rationale
1.1.1. Etiopathogenesis and Incidence
1.1.2. Direct and Indirect Costs
1.1.3. IBD and Fatigue
1.1.4. Nursing: What Interventions Can the Nurse Offer?
- Reducing the stress caused by other interventions to a minimum, understanding the needs and preferences of the individual patient, communicating with the patient using the most effective strategy, offering empathic support, and encouraging the patient to develop self-care skills so that he or she can play an active role in the management of the disease [27];
- Informing patients about the dietary rules to be followed to facilitate the remission of the disease and its maintenance, ensuring the patient has the right nutritional intake in the active stages of the disease, where even simple food intake can be difficult [28], and trying to make it clear that each individual patient will be able to achieve his or her own balance and that there are no rules that are the same for everyone [29];
- Identifying the patient’s needs in the management of emotional aspects related to sexuality and the complications that the disease entails, changes in body image and functionality, dependence on drugs and therapies, and difficulty in acceptance [30].
1.1.5. Why This Review Is Needed
1.2. Objective of the Review
2. Methods
2.1. Criteria Used for the Selection of Studies to Be Included in the Review
2.1.1. Types of Studies
2.1.2. Types of Participants
2.1.3. Types of Interventions
2.1.4. Types of Outcome Measurements
Primary Outcomes
- In which fatigue, the loss of energy/vigor, emerges from a single question or from measuring instruments specifically created to assess the presence or absence of these symptoms;
- Which include multidimensional assessments that analyze the sense of fatigue from multiple aspects, such as intensity, frequency, and severity, or that evaluate mental, physical, social, and affective involvement;
- Proposing solutions and methodologies to alleviate the sense of fatigue, which then provide strategies to patients (through psychological and physical techniques, through group interventions or personal investigations).
Secondary Outcomes
2.2. Search Strategy
2.2.1. Electronic Search
PUBMED Search Strategies
CINAHL Search Strategies
SCOPUS Search Strategies
COCHRANE Search Strategies
2.2.2. Research by Means of Other Resources
2.3. Selection Process
2.4. Data Collection Process
2.5. Review Protocol Registration
3. Results
3.1. Study Selection
3.2. Study Characteristics
Article #1 | Article #2 | |
---|---|---|
Title | Solution focused therapy: A promising new tool in the management of fatigue in Crohn’s disease patients psychological interventions for the management of fatigue in Crohn’s disease | Fatigue management in patients with IBD: a randomised controlled trial |
Journal | Journal of Crohn’s and Colitis | G.U.T |
Date | 2 June 2011 | 24 June 2013 |
Study design | randomized-controlled trial | randomized-controlled trial |
Country | Netherlands | Netherlands |
Allocation to groups | Random, 20 pcs in the control group, 10 in the Problem-Solving Therapy group, and 10 in the Solution Focused Therapy group | random, 49 pcs in the control group, and 49 in the Solution Focused Therapy group |
Selection criteria | Inclusion criteria: patients with a degree of fatigue > 35% (according to CIS-20 questionnaire), patients with disease in remission (according to HBI questionnaire), patients with a value < 10 on the scales on quality of life and anxiety and depression (IBD-Questionnaire and HADS-Anxiety and Depression Scale). Exclusion criteria: patients with active or acute illness (according to HBI questionnaire), pregnant patients, lactating patients, patients suffering from short bowel syndrome, cancer patients, and patients suffering from psychiatric disorders. | Inclusion criteria: patients over 18 years of age, patients with a degree of fatigue > 35% (according to the CIS-20 questionnaire), patients with disease in remission (according to the HBI questionnaire), patients with a value < 10 on the scales on quality of life and anxiety and depression (IBD-Questionnaire and HADS-Anxiety and Depression Scale). Exclusion criteria: patients with active or acute illness (according to HBI questionnaire), pregnant patients, lactating patients, patients with short bowel syndrome, cancer patients, patients with psychiatric disorders, patients with other bowel disorders, patients with kidney, infectious, hepatic, cardiological diseases, patients who have performed interventions in the last 12 months, patients who have a history of substance or alcohol abuse. |
N° enrolled | 40 | 98 |
Gender: | 72% women, 28% men | 63% women, 37% men |
Disease | CD in remission | UC or CD indifferently, disease in remission, or mildly active |
Results: | CIS total score after 3 months: decrease in 45.5% of patients (control group), 85.7% (SFT group), 60% (PST group). No significant differences were observed between the groups. Costs: decrease in 45.5% of patients (control croup), 57.1% (SFT group), 20% (PST group). No significant differences were observed between the groups. Quality of life (IBDQ total score): the intervention groups showed more patients with improved scores than the control patients from baseline to follow-up (SFT 71.4%, PST 60%, control group 50%). No significant differences were observed between the groups. Anxiety and depression (HADS scale): all patients remained under the score of 10 points, meaning no clinically significant depression or anxiety occurred during the 6-month study period. | CIS total score: after 3 months, significantly more patients of the SFT group (39%), compared with the control group (18%), scored below the cut-off score of 35 on the CIS-fatigue (p = 0.03). At 6 months, this was 34% and 21%, respectively (p = 0.19). At 9 months, 30% of the SFT group and 26% of the CAU group showed lower scores than 35 on the CIS-fatigue scale (p = 0.66). Anxiety and depression (HADS scale): at baseline (SFT: 6.1; CAU: 6.1), at 3 months (SFT: 5.0; CAU: 5.9; p = 0.03), and at 9 months (SFT: 5.5, CAU: 5.3, p = 0.70). |
Bias | The working group is minimal and the dropout rate in general is high; moreover, there is no balance between the two sexes, and the study proposes an idea of intervention that seems effective. However, more research or a larger intervention group is needed to come to scientific conclusions that confirm the results of this study. | Disease activity was not reassessed during follow-up. The control group had received some information about the intervention, and this may have affected the results; it would have been interesting to evaluate the effects of the intervention with a follow-up at 18 months. |
3.3. Outcomes of the Studies
3.3.1. Primary Outcomes
3.3.2. Secondary-Outcomes
4. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
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Martinato, M.; Boffo, E.; Lorenzon, G.; Monaco, E.; Iervolino, C.; Comoretto, R.I.; Savarino, E.V.; Gregori, D. Nursing Interventions Targeting Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review. Gastrointest. Disord. 2024, 6, 706-719. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord6030047
Martinato M, Boffo E, Lorenzon G, Monaco E, Iervolino C, Comoretto RI, Savarino EV, Gregori D. Nursing Interventions Targeting Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review. Gastrointestinal Disorders. 2024; 6(3):706-719. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord6030047
Chicago/Turabian StyleMartinato, Matteo, Elena Boffo, Greta Lorenzon, Eleonora Monaco, Clara Iervolino, Rosanna Irene Comoretto, Edoardo Vincenzo Savarino, and Dario Gregori. 2024. "Nursing Interventions Targeting Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review" Gastrointestinal Disorders 6, no. 3: 706-719. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord6030047
APA StyleMartinato, M., Boffo, E., Lorenzon, G., Monaco, E., Iervolino, C., Comoretto, R. I., Savarino, E. V., & Gregori, D. (2024). Nursing Interventions Targeting Fatigue in Inflammatory Bowel Disease: A Systematic Review. Gastrointestinal Disorders, 6(3), 706-719. https://doi.org/10.3390/gidisord6030047