Ann M Berger1, Sriram Yennu, Rita Million. 1. College of Nursing, University of Nebraska Medical Center, Omaha, Nebraska 68198-5330, USA. aberger@unmc.edu
Abstract
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Although clinicians and researchers acknowledge symptom clusters, the focus has been on relieving a single symptom. This review summarizes the recent literature on interventions that focus on relief of symptom clusters in patients with cancer. RECENT FINDINGS: Twelve intervention studies meeting inclusion criteria were published in 2011-2012. The timeframe was expanded to 2009-2012 and 24 studies met the criteria: 18 in early stage and 6 in advanced-stage cancer patients. Several cognitive behavioral therapy, complementary therapy, and exercise interventions demonstrated positive outcomes in relieving a variety of symptom clusters in several cancer types. Most psychoeducational interventions using traditional formats or those combined with automated clinician alerts demonstrated effectiveness in reducing a variety of clusters. Clusters that included fatigue and anxiety or depression were reduced by exercise in early stage patients and by methylphenidate in advanced-stage patients. Current NIH R01 funded studies verified the trends in the types of interventions being tested. SUMMARY: Few interventions have been tested and found to be effective in relieving the specific symptom clusters in early and advanced-stage cancer patients. Future research needs to expand our understanding of the mechanisms that initiate co-occurring symptoms. Mechanism-targeted interventions need to be identified and tested in homogeneous samples with specific symptom clusters. Interventions need to be replicated before guidelines can be established.
PURPOSE OF REVIEW: Although clinicians and researchers acknowledge symptom clusters, the focus has been on relieving a single symptom. This review summarizes the recent literature on interventions that focus on relief of symptom clusters in patients with cancer. RECENT FINDINGS: Twelve intervention studies meeting inclusion criteria were published in 2011-2012. The timeframe was expanded to 2009-2012 and 24 studies met the criteria: 18 in early stage and 6 in advanced-stage cancerpatients. Several cognitive behavioral therapy, complementary therapy, and exercise interventions demonstrated positive outcomes in relieving a variety of symptom clusters in several cancer types. Most psychoeducational interventions using traditional formats or those combined with automated clinician alerts demonstrated effectiveness in reducing a variety of clusters. Clusters that included fatigue and anxiety or depression were reduced by exercise in early stage patients and by methylphenidate in advanced-stage patients. Current NIH R01 funded studies verified the trends in the types of interventions being tested. SUMMARY: Few interventions have been tested and found to be effective in relieving the specific symptom clusters in early and advanced-stage cancerpatients. Future research needs to expand our understanding of the mechanisms that initiate co-occurring symptoms. Mechanism-targeted interventions need to be identified and tested in homogeneous samples with specific symptom clusters. Interventions need to be replicated before guidelines can be established.
Authors: Christine Miaskowski; Andrea Barsevick; Ann Berger; Rocco Casagrande; Patricia A Grady; Paul Jacobsen; Jean Kutner; Donald Patrick; Lani Zimmerman; Canhua Xiao; Martha Matocha; Sue Marden Journal: J Natl Cancer Inst Date: 2017-01-24 Impact factor: 13.506
Authors: Marie Flannery; Karen F Stein; David W Dougherty; Supriya Mohile; Joseph Guido; Nancy Wells Journal: Oncol Nurs Forum Date: 2018-09-01 Impact factor: 2.172
Authors: Annabelle Ballesta; Pasquale F Innominato; Robert Dallmann; David A Rand; Francis A Lévi Journal: Pharmacol Rev Date: 2017-04 Impact factor: 25.468
Authors: David F Lobach; Ellis B Johns; Barbara Halpenny; Toni-Ann Saunders; Jane Brzozowski; Guilherme Del Fiol; Donna L Berry; Ilana M Braun; Kathleen Finn; Joanne Wolfe; Janet L Abrahm; Mary E Cooley Journal: JMIR Med Inform Date: 2016-11-08