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Friday, July 15, 2005
Results of First Multicenter Trial of Intercessory Prayer, Healing Touch in Heart Patients
By Tracey Koepke, Duke University Medical Center News Office
DURHAM, N.C. – Distant prayer and the bedside use of music,
imagery and touch (MIT therapy) did not have a significant effect
upon the primary clinical outcome observed in patients undergoing
certain heart procedures, researchers at Duke Clinical Research
Institute (DCRI), Duke University Medical Center, the Durham Veterans
Affairs Medical Center (VAMC) and seven other leading academic medical
institutions across the U.S. have found. Therapeutic effects were
noted, however, among secondary measures such as emotional distress
of patients, re-hospitalization and death rates.
The study marks the first time rigorous scientific protocols have
been applied on a large scale to some of the world's most ancient
healing traditions, the authors said, and the trends they observed
may yield important clues to understanding the role of the human
spirit in modern, technology-laden cardiovascular healthcare.

Mitch Krucoff, MD |
"Prayers for the sick and healing-touch are among the most
widely practiced healing traditions around the world," said
Mitchell Krucoff, MD, interventional cardiologist at Duke and lead
author of the study. "As widespread as these practices are,
few rigorous studies exist to explain any mechanism of action or
reliable measures of safety or effectiveness. While many of us are
fascinated culturally or philosophically with the mystery of healing
and prayer, for the practice of medicine we need to understand these
phenomena with data-driven insight."
The report from Duke, which appears in the July 16, 2005, issue
of The Lancet, is based upon data from the Monitoring and Actualization
of Noetic TRAinings (MANTRA) II study – the first multicenter,
prospective, randomized trial of distant intercessory prayer and
bedside music, imagery and touch therapy (MIT). "Noetic"
interventions like prayer and MIT therapies are defined as "an
intangible healing influence brought about without the use of a
drug, device or surgical procedure," according to the researchers.
A total of 748 patients with coronary artery disease who were to
undergo percutaneous coronary intervention (a type of stenting procedure)
or elective cardiac catheterization with possible percutaneous coronary
intervention were enrolled at one of nine study sites between May
1999 and Dec. 2002. Patients were randomized equally to each of
the two noetic therapies or standard care, creating four treatment
groups. One group (189 patients) received both off-site intercessory
prayer and MIT therapy; a second group (182 patients) received off-site
intercessory prayer only; a third group (185 patients) received
MIT therapy only, while the fourth group (192 patients) received
neither the intercessory prayer nor the MIT therapy. The interventional
heart procedures were all conducted according to each institution's
standard practice, and the study called for a six-month period of
follow-up.
The prayer portion of the randomization was double-blinded, meaning
that patients and their care team did not know which patients were
receiving intercessory prayer. Per Institutional Review Board policies
governing clinical research, all patients were aware that they might
be prayed for by people they did not know, from a variety of faiths.
The MIT portion of the study was not blinded, so patients and their
care team knew if they were randomized to those groups.
The prayer groups for the study were located throughout the world
and included Buddhist, Muslim, Jewish and multiple Christianity-based
denominations. The researchers noted 89 percent of the patients
in this study also knew of someone praying for them outside of the
study protocol altogether.
Examining the effects of prayer upon health outcomes has been controversial,
the authors acknowledge. However, "carefully examining the
role of the human spirit in healthcare does not diminish its mystery,
but it separates the mystery from the question of utility in healthcare
practice," Krucoff said.
MIT therapy was performed by a certified practitioner for 40 minutes
at the patient's bedside after enrollment but before the coronary
procedure. The patient was taught relaxed abdominal breathing, chose
a preferred place image (defined as the most beautiful,peaceful
place he or she had ever been)and selected a musical preference
(easy listening, classical, or country music). Identical cassette-tape
music-imagery scripts were used for all patients in all enrollment
sites. After the imagery script, the practitioner applied 21 healing
touch hand positions, each for a period of 45 seconds. The patient
then had the option to wear the headphones with musical background
during the coronary procedure.
The primary clinical outcome included a combination of in-hospital
major adverse cardiovascular events such as death; new signs of
heart attack or a rise in the damage-indicating enzyme creatine
phosphokinase to more than twice the upper limit of normal; new
congestive heart failure; the need for additional coronary stenting;
or the need for heart bypass surgery, and/or re-hospitalization
or death within the six-month post-discharge follow up. Pre-specified
secondary study endpoints included subsets of the primary endpoint
combination, such as six-month death or re-hospitalization, as well
as measures of emotional distress prior to a patient's procedure.
The researchers found no significant differences among the treatment
groups in the primary composite endpoint. However, six-month mortality
was lower in patients assigned bedside MIT, with the lowest absolute
death rates observed in patients treated with both prayer and bedside
MIT. Patients treated with bedside MIT also showed changes in self-rated
emotional distress prior to catheterization and stenting.
"The most statistically significant finding of our analyses
so far is the relief of pre-procedural distress with the use of
music, imagery and touch administered by a trained practitioner
at the patient's bedside," said Suzanne Crater, ANP-C, cardiology
nurse practitioner at DUMC and Durham VAMC and co-director of the
MANTRA study project at the DCRI. "Whether this relief of distress
translates into better outcomes will require further analysis but
the implications for every bedside practitioner are of great interest."
The researchers say their study design sets a foundation for further
research in this area.
"While it's clear there was no measurable impact on the primary
composite endpoints of this study, the trends and behavior of pre-specified
secondary outcome measures suggest treatment effects that can be
taken pretty seriously when considering future study directions,"
Krucoff added.
Following the terror attacks of Sept. 11, 2001, enrollment rates
in the study fell sharply for approximately three months. During
that time, the research team chose to amend the study by adding
a two-tiered prayer strategy. Twelve additional "second-tier"
prayer groups were added. When new patients were added to groups
receiving intercessory prayers as part of the study, the second-tier
prayer groups were asked to pray for the primary prayer groups that
had been praying for the patients all along. The researchers created
this design to simulate a higher dose of prayer for the remaining
patients enrolled in the study. Patients treated with "two-tiered"
prayer had absolute six-month death and re-hospitalization rates
that were about 30 percent lower than control patients, statistically
characterized as a suggestive trend.
"While these are ancient healing modalities in all of the
world's cultures, the scientific literature and understanding of
the role of intangible human capacities in our world of high tech
medical care is very, very young" said Krucoff. "The MANTRA
II study shows that we can do good science in this arena, and that
we can disseminate what we learn in high-level peer-reviewed publications.
This is an early step, not a final one, in advancing our paradigms
of optimal cardiovascular care."
The enrollment sites included: Durham VAMC, Duke University Hospital,
Washington Hospital Center, Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine,
Scripps Mercy Hospital, Florida Cardiovascular Research Group, Abbott
Northwestern Hospital, Geisinger Medical Center and Columbia University
– New York Presbyterian Hospital.
Funding for the study was provided by grants from the RAMA Foundation,
Bakken Family Foundation, George Family Foundation, FACT Foundation,
Duke University Heart Center, Duke Clinical Research Institute,
Columbia University Medical Center, Geisinger Medical Center, Scripps
Clinic, and the Institute of Noetic Sciences.
Other authors on the study include Dianne Gallup, Daniel Mark,
MD and Kerry Lee, of the Duke Clinical Research Institute; Michael
Cuffe, MD and Michael H. Sketch, Jr. MD, of Duke University Medical
Center; Harold G. Koenig, MD, of the Geriatric Research, Education
and Clinical Center, Durham VAMC; Kenneth Morris, MD, of Durham
VAMC; James C. Blankenship, MD, of Geisinger Medical Center; Mimi
Guarneri, MD, of Scripps Center for Integrative Medicine; Richard
A. Krieger, MD, of Florida Cardiovascular Group; Vib R. Kshettry,
MD, of Minneapolis Heart Institute; Mehmet Oz, MD, of Columbia University
College of Physicians and Surgeons; and Augusto Pichard, MD, of
Washington Hospital Center, Washington, DC. |
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