The effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety in young nulliparous patients undergoing laparoscopic cystectomy for endometriosis: a randomized controlled trial
Journal
Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology
Year
2025
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Endometriosis (EMS) is associated with a markedly increased incidence of depression and anxiety, primarily due to cyclic pain, concerns about infertility from impaired ovarian function, and fear of disease recurrence. Surgery and its associated pain may trigger both emotional and physiological stress responses. Young, nulliparous patients with fertility intentions often experience additional psychological burdens related to surgical safety, postoperative recovery, and the potential impact on future fertility. Music has been shown to promote relaxation, reduce tension and anxiety, and alleviate pain. However, no studies have evaluated the postoperative effects of music therapy in this specific patient population. OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether music therapy can effectively reduce postoperative pain and alleviate perioperative anxiety in young patients with fertility desires undergoing laparoscopic cystectomy for endometriotic ovarian cysts, and to explore its potential as a simple, non-pharmacological intervention. METHODS/DESIGN: A single-center, two-arm, single-masked randomized controlled trial (RCT). SETTING: The Third Affiliated Hospital of Sun Yat-sen University (a teaching hospital). PARTICIPANTS: A total of 149 patients were included for analysis, with 75 assigned to the music group and 74 to the control group. INTERVENTION: Perioperative music therapy administered to young, nulliparous patients with fertility intentions undergoing laparoscopic cystectomy for EMS. RESULTS: One participant withdrew during follow-up, and 149 patients were included in the final analysis. Baseline characteristics-including age, BMI, marital status, preoperative VAS scores, and GAD-7 scores and anxiety levels-showed no significant differences between groups. Postoperative VAS scores at 6 h (p = 0.20), Day 1 (p = 0.438), Day 3 (p = 0.714), and Day 7 (p = 0.899) revealed no significant differences. Similarly, GAD-7 scores and anxiety severity levels on postoperative Day 1 (p = 0.541; p = 0.984), Day 3 (p = 0.287; p = 0.436), and Day 7 (p = 0.468; p = 0.703) showed no statistical significance between groups. CONCLUSION: Music therapy may serve as an adjunctive intervention for young, nulliparous patients with fertility intentions undergoing laparoscopic cystectomy for endometriosis; however, no significant effects were observed in reducing perioperative anxiety or postoperative pain in this population.
Music and Health Institute Terms
Anxiety; Depression; Pain; Postoperative Pain; Fear; Pain Management and Control; Psychological Outcomes; Music Medicine; Music Listening; Recorded Music Listening; Surgery; Obstetrical/Gynecological Surgery; Physiological Measures; Subjective Measures
Indexed Terms
anxiety; Anxiety; Cystectomy; Endometriosis; laparoscopic surgery; Laparoscopy; Ovarian Cysts; pain; Postoperative Pain; Single-Blind Method
Study Type
Randomized Controlled Trial; Quantitative Methods
PubMed ID
PMID: 40534482
Document Type
Article
Recommended Citation
Li, W., Feng, H., Yang, X., Meng, Y., Yang, Y., & Ye, Q. (2025). The effects of music therapy on pain and anxiety in young nulliparous patients undergoing laparoscopic cystectomy for endometriosis: a randomized controlled trial. Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynaecology, 46 (1), 2519385. Retrieved from https://remix.berklee.edu/mhi-citations/1868