| Literature DB >> 28432286 |
Anna Spathis1,2, Sara Booth3, Catherine Moffat4, Rhys Hurst4, Richella Ryan3, Chloe Chin4, Julie Burkin4.
Abstract
Refractory breathlessness is a highly prevalent and distressing symptom in advanced chronic respiratory disease. Its intensity is not reliably predicted by the severity of lung pathology, with unhelpful emotions and behaviours inadvertently exacerbating and perpetuating the problem. Improved symptom management is possible if clinicians choose appropriate non-pharmacological approaches, but these require engagement and commitment from both patients and clinicians. The Breathing Thinking Functioning clinical model is a proposal, developed from current evidence, that has the potential to facilitate effective symptom control, by providing a rationale and focus for treatment.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28432286 PMCID: PMC5435098 DOI: 10.1038/s41533-017-0024-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: NPJ Prim Care Respir Med ISSN: 2055-1010 Impact factor: 2.871
Summary of key evidence for approaches to the management of breathlessness in advanced disease
| Reference | Description | Impact on breathlessness and other key outcomes |
|---|---|---|
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| Bausewein | Cochrane systematic review of 47 controlled studies (2532 participants) evaluating non-pharmacological approaches in any advanced disease. Studies evaluating pulmonary rehabilitation, exercise and self-management education excluded | High strength of evidence for neuromuscular electrical stimulation and chest wall vibration |
| Moderate strength of evidence for walking aids and breathing retraining | ||
| Low strength of evidence for acupuncture/pressure | ||
| Zwerink | Cochrane systematic review of 28 controlled studies evaluating self-management interventions in COPD | Significant reduction in breathlessness and respiratory-related hospital admissions |
| Improved health-related quality of life | ||
| Howard | Randomised controlled trial involving 222 COPD patients allocated to receive a cognitive-behavioural manual (applying CBT techniques within a self-management framework, with brief telephone support) or an information booklet | Significant improvement in breathlessness at 6 months (secondary outcome) |
| Reduction in A&E visits by 42% with associated cost-savings, improved anxiety, depression | ||
| McCarthy | Cochrane systematic review of 65 randomised controlled trials evaluating pulmonary rehabilitation in COPD | Moderately large and clinically significant improvement in breathlessness. |
| Also improvements in fatigue, quality of life and emotional function | ||
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| ||
| Abernethy | Randomised controlled crossover trial of oral morphine sustained release 20 mg twice daily for 4 days vs. placebo, involving 48 opioid-naive participants | 6.6–9.5% improvement in breathlessness More distressing constipation in the opioid group despite laxatives |
| Abernethy | Randomised controlled trial of 239 participants (152 with COPD) with life-limiting illness, 2 l/min oxygen or room air via a concentrator for at least 15 h/day | Improvement in both oxygen and room air group, but no significant differences between groups |
| Barnes | Cochrane systematic review of 26 controlled trials evaluating opioids for refractory breathlessness in any advanced disease | Low quality evidence of improvement in post-treatment breathlessness, but no statistically significant change of breathlessness from baseline |
| Simon | Cochrane systematic review of seven controlled trials evaluating benzodiazepines in advanced malignant or non-malignant disease | No beneficial effect of benzodiazepines, including from a meta-analysis of six of the seven studies |
| Uronis | Systematic review and meta-analysis of five studies evaluating oxygen for dyspnoea in mildly- or non-hypoxaemic cancer patients | Oxygen did not improve breathlessness |
| Ekstrom | Cochrane systematic review of 33 randomised controlled trials evaluating oxygen for dyspnoea in patients with COPD who do not qualify for home oxygen therapy | Oxygen improved breathlessness by the equivalent of 0.7 cm in a 10 cm visual analogues scale, on exercise only. |
| There was no benefit from oxygen before exercise, and no improvement in quality of life. | ||
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| Bredin | Randomised controlled trial of 119 patients with lung cancer receiving a nurse-led, non-pharmacological, outpatient intervention or best supportive care | Significant improvement in breathlessness, as well as performance status, anxiety and depression, at 8 weeks |
| Farquhar | Randomised controlled trial involving 67 cancer patients, receiving the Breathlessness Intervention Service (multidisciplinary team providing predominantly home-based, non-pharmacological approaches) or usual care | Distress from breathlessness improved significantly (primary outcome) at 2 weeks |
| Evidence of cost-effectiveness | ||
| Higginson | Randomised controlled trial involving 105 patients with mixed advanced disease, receiving Breathlessness Support Service (multidisciplinary team providing predominantly outpatient and home-based, predominantly non-pharmacological approaches) or usual care. | Mastery of breathlessness improved significantly by an average of 16% (primary outcome), at 6 weeks |
| Significant improvement in survival in the intervention group | ||
| Johnson | Randomised controlled trial involving 156 cancer patients receiving either three or a single breathing technique training session | Improvement in worst breathlessness in last 24 h in both groups, but not difference between groups |
| The single session was cost-effective | ||
Fig. 1The Breathing, Thinking, Functioning clinical model
Categorisation of symptom management approaches according to Breathing, Thinking, Functioning domain
| Breathing | Thinking | Functioning |
|---|---|---|
| Breathing techniques | Cognitive behavioural therapy | Pulmonary rehabilitation |
| Handheld fan | Relaxation techniques | Activity promotion |
| Airway clearance techniques | Mindfulness | Walking aids |
| Inspiratory muscle training | Acupuncture | Pacing |
| Chest wall vibration | Neuromuscular electrical stimulation | |
| Non-invasive ventilation |
Fig. 2Challenging the misconceptions driving each vicious cycle