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Paced Respiration for Vasomotor and Other Menopausal Symptoms: A Randomized, Controlled Trial
Authors:Janet S. Carpenter PhD   RN   FAAN  Debra S. Burns PhD   MT-BC  Jingwei Wu MS  Julie L. Otte PhD   RN  Bryan Schneider MD  Kristin Ryker MPH  Eileen Tallman BS  Menggang Yu PhD
Affiliation:1. Indiana University, Indianapolis, IN, USA
4. Indiana University School of Nursing, 1111 Middle Drive, NU345, Indianapolis, IN, 46202, USA
2. Purdue University, Indianapolis, IN, USA
3. University of Wisconsin, Madison, WI, USA
Abstract:

BACKGROUND

Paced respiration has been internationally recommended for vasomotor symptom management, despite limited empirical evidence.

OBJECTIVE

To evaluate efficacy of a paced respiration intervention against breathing control and usual care control for vasomotor and other menopausal symptoms.

DESIGN

A 16-week, 3-group, partially blinded, controlled trial with 2:2:1 randomization and stratification by group (breast cancer, no cancer), in a Midwestern city and surrounding area.

PARTICIPANTS

Two hundred and eighteen randomized women (96 breast cancer survivors, 122 menopausal women without cancer), recruited through community mailings and registries (29 % minority).

INTERVENTIONS

Training, home practice support, and instructions to use the breathing at the time of each hot flash were delivered via compact disc with printed booklet (paced respiration intervention) or digital videodisc with printed booklet (fast shallow breathing control). Usual care control received a letter regarding group assignment.

MAIN MEASURES

Hot flash frequency, severity, and bother (primary); hot flash interference in daily life, perceived control over hot flashes, and mood and sleep disturbances (secondary). Intervention performance, adherence, and adverse events were assessed.

KEY RESULTS

There were no significant group differences for primary outcomes at 8-weeks or 16-weeks post-randomization. Most intervention participants did not achieve 50 % reduction in vasomotor symptoms, despite demonstrated ability to correctly do paced respiration and daily practice. Statistically significant differences in secondary outcomes at 8 and 16 weeks were small, not likely to be clinically relevant, and as likely to favor intervention as breathing control.

CONCLUSIONS

Paced respiration is unlikely to provide clinical benefit for vasomotor or other menopausal symptoms in breast cancer survivors or menopausal women without cancer.
Keywords:
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