| Literature DB >> 19161607 |
Kathrin Wode1, Thomas Schneider, Ingrid Lundberg, Gunver S Kienle.
Abstract
Cancer-related fatigue (CRF) is a major and very common disabling condition in cancer patients. Treatment options do exist but have limited therapeutic effects. Mistletoe extracts are widely-used complementary cancer treatments whose possible impact on CRF has not been investigated in detail. A 36-year-old Swedish woman with a 10-year history of recurrent breast cancer, suffering from severe CRF, started complementary cancer treatment with mistletoe extracts. Over two and a half years a correspondence was observed between the intensity of mistletoe therapy and the fatigue. Mistletoe extracts seemed to have a beneficial, dose-dependent effect on CRF. Although such effect has also been noted in clinical studies, it has never been the subject of detailed investigation. More research should clarify these observations.Entities:
Year: 2009 PMID: 19161607 PMCID: PMC2654867 DOI: 10.1186/1757-1626-2-77
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cases J ISSN: 1757-1626
Clinical trials on mistletoe treatment of cancer that also evaluated influence on fatigue (secondary outcome measure).
| Sample size | Study type | Primary study question | Assessment of fatigue/tiredness | Results on fatigue/tiredness* |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 233 | RCT | QoL | TCM-score | Improvement and advantage |
| 272 | RCT, double-blind | QoL (GLQ-8, Spitzer uniscale) | 1) GLQ-8 | 1) Significant advantage |
| 352 | RCT, double-blind | QoL (FACT-G) | GLQ-8 | Significant advantage |
| 399 | RCT, open | Disease-free survival | EORTC | No advantage |
| 25 | Phase II trial | Tumor response | Statement | Improvement |
| 804 | Retrolective comparative epidemiological cohort study (mistletoe vs. no mistletoe) | Adverse drug reactions from conventional cancer drugs, disease symptoms, functional capacity, hospitalization | Statement | Improvement and significant advantage |
| Retrolective comparative epidemiological cohort study (mistletoe vs. no mistletoe) | Adverse drug reactions from conventional cancer drugs, disease symptoms, functional capacity, hospitalization | Statement | Improvement and significant advantage | |
| 1442 | Retrolective comparative epidemiological cohort study (mistletoe vs. no mistletoe) | Adverse drug reactions from conventional cancer drugs | Statement | Improvement and significant advantage |
| 1248 | Retrolective comparative epidemiological cohort study (mistletoe vs. no mistletoe) | Adverse drug reactions from conventional cancer drugs | Statement | Significant advantage |
| 120 (44) | Matched pair study (AM versus conventional care) | QoL | EORTC | Improvement and small advantage |
| 110 | Sinlge-arm observational study | QoL | EORTC | Significant improvement |
For references see [17].
* Improvement refers to pre-post difference; advantage refers to difference of pre-post-changes between comparison groups
Abbreviations: RCT: randomised controlled trial; QoL: Quality of life; AM: anthroposophic medicine; TCM: Traditional Chinese Medicine Index; GLQ-8: Global Quality of Life Scale; FACT-G: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General; EORTC QLQ-C30: European Organization for Research and Treatment Core Quality of Life Questionnaire.
Not considered were indirect measurement of fatigue/tiredness, e.g. "I am forced to spend time in bed". Not included are three studies that also used quality of life evaluation tools including questions on fatigue but that did not present any details on fatigue: two small comparative trials using EORTC QLQ-30, one of which reported an advantage, the other one not. One single-arm trial used SF-36 and reported an improvement.
Anamnesis, findings and treatment.
| Age | State of disease | Treatment |
|---|---|---|
| Diagnosis: Left breast cancer, 1.2 cm | Surgery | |
| Onset of severe fatigue | ||
| Relapse: bone metastasis of breast cancer in sternum, verified by 2 fine-needle biopsies, hormone receptor negative, MIB-1 30%, HER-2 neg. On computer tomography two changes in lungs measuring 6 mm, considered as possible metastasis | Palliative chemotherapy: FEC-60 (Fluorouracil, Epirubicin, Cyclophosphamide) stopped after 5 cycles due to side effects (headache, nausea, pain, anxiety) | |
| Diffuse pain especially in knees | Bisphosphonates, stopped by patient after one month because of lack of improvement | |
| Reduced fatigue for some months after chemo- and radiotherapy | ||
| Severe fatigue | 10-day rehabilitation in an AM hospital Start of mistletoe treatment | |
| Fatigue of varying intensity | Mistletoe treatment: Individually adapted dosage and repeated breaks (see text and : Figure |
Figure 1Changes in mistletoe dosage, fatigue and general condition (pain, nausea, mood, headache). ↗ - improvement of symptoms, ↘ - worsening of symptoms, → - no change of symptoms. S0 – Series 0, S1 – Series 1. Letters (A, B, …) refer to description in text.
Draft ICD-10 criteria for CRF.
| Significant fatigue, diminished energy, or increased need to rest, disproportionate to any recent change in activity level | |
| Complaints of generalised weakness or limb heaviness | |
| Diminished concentration or attention | |
| Decreased motivation or interest to engage in usual activities | |
| Insomnia or hypersomnia | |
| Experience of sleep as unrefreshing or nonrestorative | |
| Perceived need to struggle to overcome inactivity | |
| Marked emotional reactivity (e.g., sadness, frustration, or irritability) to feeling fatigued | |
| Difficulty completing daily tasks attributed to feeling fatigued | |
| Perceived problems with short-term memory | |
| Postexertional malaise lasting several hours | |
| The symptoms cause clinically significant distress or impairment in social, occupational, or other important areas of functioning | |
| There is evidence from the history, physical examination or laboratory findings that the symptoms are a consequence of cancer or cancer therapy | |
| The symptoms are not primarily a consequence of comorbid psychiatric disorders such as major depression, somatization disorder, somatoform disorder, or delirium |
CRF is diagnosed when six (or more) of the symptoms above have been present everyday or nearly every day during the same two-week period in the past month, and at least one of the symptoms is significant fatigue (A1) [4,5].
Questions for assessment of fatigue severity and impact over time in routine practice setting with limited time for evaluation [22].