Abstract
Purpose
This study aimed to review quantitative literature pertaining to studies of music-based interventions in palliative cancer care and to review the neurobiological literature that may bare relevance to the findings from these studies.
Methods
A narrative review was performed, with particular emphasis on RCTs, meta-analyses, and systematic reviews. The Cochrane Library, Ovid, PubMed, CINAHL Plus, PsycINFO, and ProQuest were searched for the subject headings music, music therapy, cancer, oncology, palliative care, pain, anxiety, depression, mood, quality of life, prevalence, neuroscience, functional imaging, endogenous opioids, GABA, 5HT, dopamine, and permutations of these same search terms. Data for the review were comprised of articles published between 1970 and 2012. References of all the cited articles were also reviewed.
Results
Available evidence suggests that music-based interventions may have a positive impact on pain, anxiety, mood disturbance, and quality of life in cancer patients. Advances in neurobiology may provide insight into the potential mechanisms by which music impacts these outcomes.
Conclusions
More research is needed to determine what subpopulation of cancer patients is most likely to respond to music-based interventions, what interventions are most effective for individual outcomes, and what measurement parameters best gauge their effectiveness.
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Introduction
By alleviating the physical and psychological symptoms associated with malignancy, palliative care serves a vital role in the multidisciplinary care of cancer patients. Common symptoms such as pain, anxiety, and mood disturbance can be difficult to manage with standard pharmaceutical options and may significantly interfere with quality of life (QOL) [1, 2]. The search for complimentary interventions that are both cost effective and associated with few side effects has led to an increased interest in the therapeutic use of music for cancer patients within the field of palliative care [3–6]. This review summarizes findings from quantitative research literature. Furthermore, it discusses challenges and opportunities associated with this emerging area of research and provides practical suggestions for future investigation.
Different music-based interventions defined
The interventions in this review are generally classified as either music medicine or music therapy. In “music medicine” interventions, patients listen to prerecorded music that is administered by healthcare staff and preselected by study investigators, who may or may not have any formal training in music therapy [7, 8]. In “music therapy” interventions, patients are offered prerecorded, live, and/or interactive music that is individualized by a trained music therapist [9, 10]. Hence, the crucial distinction between music medicine (MM) and music therapy (MT) is that the former involves only a stimulus and response, and the latter involves a therapeutic relationship based on individualized assessment, treatment, and evaluation [7].
Specific clinical endpoints studied
Pain
Pain represents one of the most common symptoms affecting patients with advanced malignancy. One recent meta-analysis [11] pooled data from 52 studies (total N = 19,985) and estimated pain to occur in 33 % of patients who had completed treatment with curative intent, 59 % of patients undergoing anticancer therapy, and 64 % of patients with advanced/metastatic/terminal disease. A subsequent meta-analysis [12] pooled data from 64 studies (total N = 95,159), 34 of which reported pain prevalence in patients with all stages of cancer (including early disease), and 30 of which reported pain prevalence in patients with advanced cancer. The combined weighted mean prevalence of pain in the 14,961 patients with advanced cancer was estimated to be 75 %.
Multiple studies have demonstrated that music-based interventions may have a mild to moderate analgesic effect (Table 1). Five such randomized controlled trials (RCTs) (total N = 391) were analyzed in a 2011 Cochrane Review [13]. Prerecorded music was provided perioperatively for 15 out of 30 breast cancer patients undergoing mastectomy [14], during bone marrow biopsy for 29 out of 59 hematologic malignancy patients [15], as a single 30-min session in 62 out of 126 adult patients with various malignancies [16], during lumbar puncture in 20 out of 40 pediatric leukemia patients [17], and as a single session with guided imagery in 65 out of 136 adult patients with various malignancies [18]. Based on the combined results of these five studies, the authors classified music's analgesic effect as moderate, with a standardized mean difference (SMD) of −0.59, (95 % CI from −0.92 to −0.27, P = 0.0003). All five of the above studies reported pain by self-reported measurement scales. An earlier Cochrane Review examined the effect of music on analgesic requirements during a painful procedure (five studies), during a 2-h postoperative period (three studies), or during a 24-h postoperative period (five studies) [19]. Although none of the included studies were limited to oncologic or palliative care settings, the 13 included studies (N = 1016) did show that exposure to music was associated with a decrease in opioid requirement, with a SMD of −1.29 (95 % CI from −0.92 to −0.27, P = 0.0062). These results were consistent with those from a separate meta-analysis [20] which studied the use of music vs. standard care in adult patients undergoing colonoscopy. This meta-analysis included three trials [21–23] in which music was provided to a total of 130 out of 261 patients. The patients who received music required 29.7 % less analgesia with meperidine, alfentanil, or pethidine (P = 0.001) and 15 % less sedation with midazolam or propofol (P = 0.055). Finally, a single-arm study from 2006 [5] found that in 126 palliative care patients with pain (90 % of whom had cancer), mean self-reported pain scores decreased from 2.7 to 2.1 on a five-point VAS after a single MT session (P < 0.001).
Overall, these data (derived exclusively from MM-based approaches except for [5]) support the use of music to decrease subjective pain and analgesic requirements in acute pain settings. However, more research is needed to investigate the analgesic efficacy of music for chronic pain, since cancer patients (particularly those in palliative care settings) frequently suffer from chronic pain (e.g., from bone metastases, visceral tumor growth, neuropathic pain associated with chemotherapy, etc.). In future studies investigating music-based interventions for chronic pain, careful consideration should be given to the frequency, duration, and type of interventions used (e.g., consideration of interventions not necessarily limited to MM).
Anxiety
For many patients, the diagnosis of cancer can result in significant anxiety, which can interfere with sleep [24], enjoyment of life [25], interpersonal relationships [26], and overall daily activities [27]. Six studies using survey instruments found self-reported anxiety symptoms to be present in 19–48 % of cancer patients [1, 24, 28–31]. In contrast, three studies using structured clinical interviews found DSM-IV-defined Anxiety Disorders (e.g., generalized anxiety disorder, panic disorder, and post-traumatic stress disorder) to be present in 7.6 to 18 % of cancer patients [24, 32, 33].
Several studies have demonstrated that music-based interventions may have a mild to moderate anxiolytic effect (Table 2). Seven such studies (six RCTs and one controlled clinical trial (CCT), total N = 386) using self-report outcomes were analyzed in the 2011 Cochrane Review [13]. Music was provided perioperatively for 15 out of 30 breast cancer patients undergoing mastectomy [14], during invasive procedures for 20 out of 39 pediatric cancer patients [34], directly prior to the administration of adjuvant chemotherapy for 30 out of 60 breast cancer patients [35], during bone marrow biopsy for 29 out of 59 adults with hematologic malignancy [15], during chemotherapy for 10 out of 20 adult cancer patients [36], during radiation therapy for 19 out of 42 adult cancer patients [37], and as a single 30-min session for 65 out of 136 adult cancer patients with pain [18]. Based on the combined results of these seven studies, the SMD on the 80-point State-Trait Anxiety Inventory Scale (STAI-S) was −11.20 units (95 % CI −19.59 to −2.82, P = 0.0088). These results were consistent with those from four other RCTs involving patients without cancer, in whom perioperative anxiety was significantly reduced by music-based interventions [38–41]. One small but well-designed RCT specifically examined the effectiveness of a single 20–40-min MT session in reducing anxiety for terminally ill patients [42]. Although cancer was not an inclusion criterion, 24 out of 25 patients in the study had cancer, and all study participants were inpatients receiving palliative care services. Based on the Edmonton Symptom Assessment Scale anxiety scores before and after the intervention, the Mann–Whitney test showed that anxiety was significantly reduced in the music group compared to the control group (P = 0.005).
Overall, these data (derived from six studies using MM and two studies using MT) support the use of music to reduce anxiety in situations such as before/during invasive procedures, chemotherapy, and radiation therapy. Relatively less is known about music’s capacity to decrease the need for pharmacologic anxiolytics/sedatives/hypnotics. Although one study in 327 patients undergoing elective surgery showed a greater decrease in preoperative STAI-S scores with relaxing music than 0.05–0.1mg/kg of midazolam (P < 0.001) [43], the relevance of this finding to the oncologic and palliative care settings remains uncertain. Furthermore, more research is needed to investigate the anxiolytic efficacy of music beyond the acute/situational anxiety setting, particularly for cancer patients in whom the recognition of disease progression and impending death may be particularly anxiety inducing [44, 45].
Mood disturbance
The period following diagnosis of cancer can be very emotional for many patients. Patients with frequent depressive symptoms may develop a sustained disturbance of mood and may eventually meet criteria for a DSM-IV-defined Affective Disorder (e.g., major depressive disorder or dysthymic disorder). Prevalence studies suggest that self-reported depressive symptoms in patients with cancer are common and perhaps more common in the terminal/advanced setting [46–49]. Four studies using survey instruments found depressive symptoms present in 53–74 % of cancer patients [46, 50–52]. A much more recent meta-analysis of 94 interview-based studies estimated the combined mean prevalence of major depressive disorder and dysthymic disorder in palliative and hematologic–oncologic settings [53]. From the 24 studies conducted in palliative care settings (total N = 4,007), the combined mean prevalence of these two disorders was found to be 24.6 %. From the 70 studies conducted in hematology–oncology settings (total N = 10,071), combined mean prevalence was found to be 20.7 %. To place these numbers in context, the NIMH estimates the combined prevalence of major depressive disorder and dysthymic disorder to be 8.2 % among US adults (two to three times lower than in cancer patients).
While multiple studies have found that music-based interventions may have a positive impact on mood (Table 3), this has not necessarily been the case for depression. Such a discrepancy may be at least partially explained by differences between methods used to assess mood disturbance versus those used to assess depression. For example, the commonly used Profile of Mood States (POMS) uses six domains to calculate a total mood disturbance score: depression–dejection, tension–anxiety, anger–hostility, fatigue–inertia, confusion–bewilderment, and vigor–activity. The first five domains are weighted positively and the last domain is weighted negatively, such that a higher score indicates a greater disturbance of mood. Henceforth, music could elicit improvement in mood via the five other domains but not in “depression/dejection.” This difference in outcomes was well illustrated in a 2011 Cochrane Review [13], which analyzed five trials examining the effect of music on depression (total N = 468 patients). Music was provided for 128 out of 182 adults with cancer receiving chemotherapy or radiation therapy [54], 34 out of 60 adults with hematologic malignancy admitted for autologous SCT [55], 27 out of 48 adults with cancer undergoing radiation therapy [56], 20 out of 42 women with metastatic breast cancer [57], and 65 out of 136 adult cancer patients with pain [18]. The pooled estimate from these five trials did not find a statistically significant effect of music on depression (SMD = −0.07, 95 % CI −0.40 to 0.27, P = 0.69). However, the same meta-analysis analyzed three trials examining the effect of music on mood (total N = 105), and the pooled estimate from these three studies did demonstrate a statistically significant effect (SMD = 0.42, 95 % CI 0.03 to 0.81, P = 0.03). These three studies investigating the outcome of mood provided music to 8 out of 15 adults with cancer-related pain [58], 34 out of 60 adults with hematologic malignancy admitted for autologous SCT [55], and 15 out of 30 children with neoplasms needing chemotherapy [59]. That Cassileth’s same study [55] showed no effect on depression, but did show an effect on mood, supports the idea that the difference between these two outcomes may be more than semantic. Among the 123 palliative care patients with mood disturbance in the single-arm study of Gallagher et al. in 2006 [5], mean self-reported mood disturbance scores improved from 1.8 to 0.7 on a five-point VAS after a single MT session (P < 0.001).
Overall, the limited data available regarding the outcome of mood (derived from three studies using MT and one study using MM) suggest that music may have a mild positive impact on the mood of cancer patients. Considering that the effects of music-based interventions on pain and anxiety have been most well demonstrated in acute settings, it may not be surprising that a single intervention (MM or MT based) may not show as much impact on mood disturbance, particularly chronically depressed mood. The availability of fast-acting pharmacologic analgesics and anxiolytics, versus the unavailability of any fast-acting pharmacologic antidepressant, may point toward potentially important neurobiological differences underlying these symptoms. With this in mind, particular consideration should be given to the frequency and duration (as well as the type) of interventions in future studies investigating the impact of music on mood in cancer patients.
Quality of life
Although there may be less prevalence data measuring overall QOL impairment in cancer patients (relative to pain, anxiety, and depression), the available data suggest that cancer is indeed associated with impaired QOL compared to the normal population [60–62]. This association could be expected for a number of reasons: first, because pain, anxiety, and depression are frequently incorporated into the tools used to measure HR-QOL in cancer patients; secondly, because all three of these symptoms have been shown to commonly affect patients with cancer [63]; and finally, because multiple studies in patients with multiple types of cancer have demonstrated independent associations between HR-QOL impairment and pain [64–68], anxiety [69–71], and depression [72–74].
Although the impact of music-based interventions on QOL has not been as extensively studied as pain, anxiety, or mood disturbance, four RCTs analyzed in the 2011 Cochrane Review [13] compared the impact of music-based interventions to standard care on QOL scores (Table 4). Clearly, QOL represents a more complex and multi-faceted outcome than pain, anxiety, or depression, and the comparison of results from these four studies was made even more complex by the fact that they all used different QOL assessment tools. In one of the four studies [57], pretest differences were too large for the results to be included in the pooled estimate. Through the other three trials, music was offered to 4 of 8 adults with cancer [75], 40 out of 80 adults with terminal cancer [76], and 124 out of 260 cancer patients receiving chemotherapy [77]. When the results from these three trials were subject to meta-analysis, a heterogeneous, nonsignificant effect was found (SMD = 2.01, 95 % CI −0.09 to 4.11, P = 0.06). Paradoxically, this nonsignificance actually resulted from a much larger beneficial effect reported in the study by Zhong [77] than that reported in the studies by Burns [75] and Hilliard [76]. When the results from the Burns and Hilliard studies were subject to meta-analysis (N = 88), this resulted in a homogenous and significant effect of MT on QOL (SMD = 1.02, 95 %CI 0.58 to 1.47, P = 0.00001). One interesting aspect of the Hilliard study was that even as the physical health of the patients in the music group declined, QOL scores improved. This was not the case in the control group, in whom QOL scores worsened as their physical health declined [76].
Clearly, more research is needed to investigate the impact of music on QOL. Given the crucial importance of this outcome to cancer patients in palliative care settings, future studies investigating the effect of music-based interventions on pain, anxiety, or mood disturbance in this patient population should incorporate QOL measurements into their outcome assessment.
Relevant advances in neurobiology
Previous speculations regarding the potential mechanisms of music-based interventions may have drastically oversimplified an extremely complex set of possible neurobiological processes [78]. Many investigators have proposed that music may compete with noxious stimuli and thereby close neurological gates of pain signal transmission, or that it may distract patients from threats that cause them to feel anxious, and/or that it may promote a sense of well-being in patients with an otherwise depressed mood. While these may all be valid theories, advances in neuroscience, and functional neuroimaging studies in particular, are providing dramatic new insights into the findings from clinical trials involving music-based interventions (Table 5).
Multiple studies have explored changes in activity within the brains of healthy, asymptomatic adults upon exposure to music. Broadly speaking, functional imaging data have shown that music modulates the activity of multiple limbic and paralimbic brain structures, but especially the ventral striatum (including the nucleus accumbens), the dorsomedial midbrain (including the ventral tegmental area and periaqueductal gray), the amygdala, and the hippocampus (Fig. 1a, b). This particular neuroanatomic distribution is striking for at least two reasons. The first is that functional abnormalities in these same structures are implicated in the pathophysiology of pain [79–81], anxiety [82–84], and depression [85–87]. The second is that these same structures are known to be densely populated by receptors of ligands associated with pain, anxiety, and depression—namely, endogenous opioids [88, 89], GABA [90, 91], and dopamine [92, 93].
Listening to music has long been known to evoke strong emotional responses which can sometimes be accompanied by physical manifestations, e.g., piloerection, more commonly known as “goosebumps” or “chills” [94, 95]. The suppression of this response with the mu-opioid receptor agonist nalaxolone provided early evidence that endogenous opioid activity might underlie pleasurable responses to music [96]. Positron emission tomography experiments subsequently showed that piloerection in response to music may be associated with increased regional cerebral blood flow to the ventral striatum and the dorsomedial midbrain but decreased regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) to the hippocampus and amygdala [97]. Even in the absence of piloerective responses, fMRI evidence suggested that consonant musical excerpts may increase activity in the ventral striatum and the anterior insula [98, 99], while dissonant excerpts may increase activity in the amygdala and hippocampus [99]. Data collected from [11C] raclopride PET demonstrated that intensely pleasurable responses to music may be associated with dopamine release in the striatal system [100]. This dopaminergic activity in the NAc following exposure to music (and other pleasurable stimuli, e.g., sex, food, and drugs of abuse) may itself be modulated by endogenous opioids [101]. Furthermore, evidence from animal models suggests that opioid efferent projections from the NAc may directly mediate reward-related behavior [102]. Within the dorsomedial midbrain (which was found to receive increased rCBF during highly pleasurable musical experiences as shown in [97]), the substructure known as the periaqueductal gray has been shown to be densely populated with endogenous opioid receptors and may be involved in both opioid-mediated reward [103] and analgesia [79, 104]. Preliminary research suggests that the action of endogenous opioids in the PAG may be influenced by the hormone oxytocin [105]; the blood concentrations of which was found to be increased (along with subjective relaxation) in perioperative patients exposed to soothing music [106]. Although multiple functional imaging studies have shown music to modulate the activity of the amygdala [97, 107], and multiple functional imaging studies have demonstrated an association between anxiety and enhanced amygdalar activity [82, 83, 108, 109], no radioligand binding experiments have specifically investigated the effect of music on gamma amino-butyric acid activity in the brain. With regard to mood disturbance, it is worth noting that music has been shown to modulate the activity of the subcallosal cingulate region [107, 110], an area which has been shown to have decreased rCBF in patients with depression [111]. Furthermore, deep brain stimulation of the subcallosal cingulate region has been shown to be an effective treatment for severe depression [86]. Finally, platelet concentrations of serotonin, which may correlate with neuronal concentrations of serotonin [112, 113], were found to be increased in humans exposed to euphonic music, but decreased in humans exposed to cacophonic music [114].
Overall, these advances in neurobiology suggest that music may affect specific neuronal pathways that are implicated in the pathophysiology of pain, anxiety, and depression. Thus, future neurobiological studies may provide objective insight into the mechanisms by which music may affect these subjective symptoms that commonly afflict patients with cancer.
Conclusions
In 2002, the WHO approved the following definition of palliative care: “An approach that improves the quality of life of patients and their families facing the problems associated with life-threatening illness, through the prevention and relief of suffering by means of early identification and impeccable assessment and treatment of pain and other problems, physical, psychosocial and spiritual” [115]. In the future, music-based interventions may prove to become valuable tools in the “relief of suffering” of cancer patients. Specifically, music may help alleviate pain, anxiety, and mood disturbance, all of which commonly occur in cancer, and all of which may be associated with impaired QOL. The potential of music to reduce the need for analgesics and/or anxiolytics, even if only by a small amount, may still have major clinical implications, especially given the frequency with which advanced age and hepato-renal dysfunction coexist in the palliative cancer care population (and hence their predisposition to pharmacologic toxicity). Furthermore, when the only pharmacologic agents available for mood disturbance take weeks to months to take effect, interventions that provide more immediate benefits, even if modest, may warrant further investigation.
It is not difficult to imagine how, for cancer patients unfamiliar with the standard inpatient healthcare environment, the hospital setting could be associated with unexpected pain (e.g., from repeated injections, blood draws, and other invasive procedures), anxiety (e.g., from loud equipment alarms and time-constrained conversations regarding prognosis often clouded by medical jargon), and even depression (e.g., related to the existential issues of having a life-threatening illness, limited social interaction, frequently interrupted sleep, etc.). The capacity of music to restore a sense of familiarity, and the therapeutic value of such a reassuring stimulus (regardless of where a patient may be in his or her disease trajectory), may be underestimated. Such reassuring familiarity could be provided in the form of a playlist of favorite songs on a portable mp3 player with headphones or even through melodic arrangement by a live music therapist that actually incorporates tones from the surrounding environment [116]. It should not necessarily be assumed that the benefits of music are limited to the relief of symptoms; that is to say, that music merely counteracts the negative consequences of disease (Fig. 2). The need for beauty (and for some, spiritual solace) may be particularly great toward the end of life for many patients. In this respect, music may exceed where standard pharmacologic means fall short. Many qualitative studies support both the potential symptom-alleviating and wellness-promoting effects of music [3, 10, 117–125]. However, quantitative data in these areas still remain limited.
In the absence of more RCTs with larger sample sizes, meta-analyses [13, 20, 126] can provide useful quantitative assessments of impact. However, controlling for variation in study design, study population, specific intervention(s), and outcome assessment methods, presents enormous challenges. For example, different music therapists can introduce variability in outcomes, even when the same specific interventions are used [127]. The data presented in the individual trials and the meta-analyses discussed in this review should therefore be considered preliminary and interpreted with caution. The statistical quality of the data in question remains diminished by high risk of bias, which almost invariably arises from the inherent difficulties associated with conventional blinding in music-based intervention studies. Furthermore, without reliable biomarkers for pain, anxiety, and depression, defining the “gold standard” in quantitative assessment of these outcomes remains formidable. Fortunately, the cost of music-based interventions remains relatively low [128], and breakthroughs in the field of neurobiology continue to advance our understanding of the anatomical and biochemical basis of how music works in the brain, and why symptoms such as pain, anxiety, and mood disturbance might be influenced.
Further investigation is warranted to determine (1) if certain subpopulations of cancer patients are more likely to respond to music-based interventions than others, (2) what interventions are most effective for such responsive patients, and (3) what measurement parameters best gauge their effectiveness. Greater collaboration between the fields of music therapy and music neuroscience may accelerate the pursuit of these objectives. Finally, given the emerging evidence that earlier involvement of palliative care may improve outcomes in certain cancer patients [129], and that psychological stress may be linked to up-regulation of inflammatory processes that promote tumor growth and angiogenesis [130–133], it follows that research into the potential of music to specifically promote relaxation and reduce stress [134], perhaps earlier in cancer’s trajectory, may also be warranted.
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Acknowledgments
Thanks to David Aten of MDACC Medical Graphics & Photography for illustrating all figures and to Mei Dong and Biquan Luo for the help with translation.
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I have no financial relationships to disclose. I have full control over the content of this article. I submit the entirety of this manuscript for review by Supportive Care in Cancer.
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Archie, P., Bruera, E. & Cohen, L. Music-based interventions in palliative cancer care: a review of quantitative studies and neurobiological literature. Support Care Cancer 21, 2609–2624 (2013). https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-013-1841-4
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-013-1841-4