| Literature DB >> 32009565 |
Sophie I van Dongen1, Kim de Nooijer1, Jane M Cramm2, Anneke L Francke3,4, Wendy H Oldenmenger5, Ida J Korfage1, Frederika E Witkamp5, Rik Stoevelaar1, Agnes van der Heide1, Judith Ac Rietjens1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Patients with advanced cancer are increasingly expected to self-manage. Thus far, this topic has received little systematic attention. AIM: To summarise studies describing self-management strategies of patients with advanced cancer and associated experiences and personal characteristics. Also, to summarise attitudes of relatives and healthcare professionals towards patient self-management.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; integrative oncology; nursing; palliative care; quality of life; self-care; self-management; systematic review
Year: 2020 PMID: 32009565 PMCID: PMC7433395 DOI: 10.1177/0269216319883976
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Med ISSN: 0269-2163 Impact factor: 4.762
Figure 1.Process of study selection (PRISMA flowchart).
Characteristics of the included articles (31 studies).
| First author | Country | Study design | Patient population: setting | Patient population: type(s) of advanced cancer | Patient population: sex | Study population(s) ( | Quality appraisal[ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Non-experimental quantitative study design
( | |||||||
| Alfano et al.[ | Brazil | Cross-sectional and prospective study (interviewer-administered surveys) | Cancer hospital | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 6 |
| Baile et al.[ | United States | Cross-sectional study (self-report surveys) | Home | Various types, that is, breast, gastrointestinal, head and neck, lung, lymphoma, melanoma/skin, urogenital and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 4 |
| Bennett et al.[ | United Kingdom | Cross-sectional study (interviewer-administered surveys) | Home | Various types, that is, breast, colorectal, gastrointestinal, lung and urogenital | Mixed | Patients ( | 5 |
| Chan et al.[ | Australia | Prospective study (interviewer-administered surveys) | Home | Various types, that is, breast, colorectal, lung and prostate | Mixed | Patients ( | 4 |
| Correa-Velez et al.[ | Australia | Prospective study (interviewer-administered surveys) | Home | Various types, that is, bladder, breast, gastrointestinal, lung, melanoma, ovarian and prostate | Mixed | Patients ( | 6 |
| Get-Kong et al.[ | Thailand | Cross-sectional study (self-report surveys) | Home and inpatient departments of two cancer centres and one university hospital | Various types; not specified | Mixed | Patients ( | 5 |
| He et al.[ | China | Cross-sectional study (self-report surveys) | Chest-oncology department of public hospital | Lung | Mixed | Patients ( | 6 |
| Norris et al.[ | United States | Cross-sectional study (self-report surveys) | Home | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 5 |
| Non-experimental qualitative study design
( | |||||||
| Bennett et al.[ | United Kingdom | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 14.5 |
| Campling et al.[ | United Kingdom | Focus groups and interviews | Home and local hospices | Various types, that is, bile duct, breast, colon, lung and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 17 |
| Correa-Velez et al.[ | Australia | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, bladder, breast, gastrointestinal, lung, melanoma, ovarian and prostate | Mixed | Patients ( | 14.0 |
| Devik et al.[ | Norway | Narrative interviews | Home | Various types; not specified | Mixed | Patients ( | 17.0 |
| Eliott et al.[ | Australia | Semi-structured interviews | Not specified | Various types, that is, breast, colorectal, kidney, lung, lymphoma and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 18.0 |
| Erol et al.[ | Turkey | Semi-structured interviews | Oncology clinic of university hospital | Various types, that is, colorectal, gastric and lung | Mixed | Patients ( | 20 |
| Gibbins et al.[ | United Kingdom | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, lung, melanoma, mesothelioma, ovary, prostate and sarcoma | Mixed | Patients ( | 17.5 |
| Hansen et al.[ | United States | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | Home | Hepatocellular carcinoma | Mixed | Patients ( | 23.0 |
| Hopkinson[ | United Kingdom | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, gastrointestinal, head and neck, lung, prostate and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 12.5 |
| Hughes et al.[ | United Kingdom | Focus group interviews | Home | Various types; not specified | Mixed | Healthcare professionals ( | 21.0 |
| Johansson et al.[ | Sweden | Focus group interviews | Home | Various types, that is, bile duct, bladder, breast and prostate | Mixed | Patients ( | 22.5 |
| Johnston et al.[ | United Kingdom | Unstructured in-depth interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, colorectal, gastrointestinal, haematological, lung and urogenital | Mixed | Patients ( | 18.0 |
| La Cour et al.[ | Denmark | Diaries, short-structured interviews, semi-structured interviews (with one-third of study sample; face-to-face or by telephone) | Home | Various types, that is, breast, colon and lung | Mixed | Patients ( | 21.5 |
| Levy and Cartwright[ | United Kingdom | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | Home | Prostate | Male | Patients ( | 22.0 |
| Lewis et al.[ | Australia | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | Home | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 18.0 |
| Liu et al.[ | China | Semi-structured interviews | Medical oncology department of general hospital | Various types, that is, breast, lung, pancreatic, prostate and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 21 |
| McPherson et al.[ | Canada | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, gastrointestinal, respiratory/thoracic, urogenital and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 21.5 |
| Pacsi[ | United States | Conversations | Home | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 19.0 |
| Peoples[ | Denmark | Structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, cervix, colon, lung, prostate and other | Mixed | Patients ( | 19.0 |
| Sand et al.[ | Norway | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Various types, that is, breast, gastrointestinal, lung, melanoma and urogenital | Mixed | Patients ( | 16.0 |
| Schulman-Green et al.[ | United States | Semi-structured interviews | Home | Breast | Female | Patients ( | 17.5 |
| Stephens et al.[ | Australia | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | Home | Myeloma | Mixed | Patients ( | 25.0 |
| Thomas and Retsas[ | Australia | Semi-structured in-depth interviews | Home | Various types; not specified | Mixed | Patients ( | 17.5 |
N: number.
Quality scores of non-experimental quantitative studies ranged from 0 to 7, with higher scores indicating higher methodological quality. Quality scores of non-experimental qualitative studies ranged from 0.0 to 32.0, with higher scores indicating better quality of reporting.
Self-management domains and self-management strategies used by patients with advanced cancer (29 studies).
| Self-management domains | Self-management strategies |
|---|---|
| Medicine and
pharmacology | • Monitoring symptoms, bodily changes, treatment effects
and/or disease risks |
| Lifestyle | • Adjusting nutrition and diet |
| Psychology/mental
health | • Keeping a diary |
| Social
support | • Seeking support from relatives and friends |
| Knowledge and
information | • Seeking information about disease and/or
treatments |
| Navigation and
coordination | • Coordinating medical services (e.g. obtaining and
exchanging health-related documents) |
| Medical
decision-making | • Making informed decisions about treatment |
N: number.
Non-experimental quantitative study results on self-management strategies and associated experiences and personal characteristics of patients with advanced cancer (eight studies).
| First author | Self-management strategies and corresponding experiences | Self-management domains | Patient characteristics associated with self-management strategies |
|---|---|---|---|
| Alfano et al.[ | At least one CAM modality used after diagnosis: 50% | • Lifestyle | |
| Baile et al.[ | Most concerns reported about (mean score (SD)[ | • Medicine and pharmacology | More self-management concerns among patients with: |
| Bennett et al.[ | Pain management strategies used: | • Lifestyle | • No differences in pain management strategies between older
(⩾75 years; |
| Chan et al.[ | Fatigue management strategies weekly used: | • Lifestyle | Predictors of total perceived effectiveness of
self-management strategies:[ |
| Correa-Velez et al.[ | • Undergoing surgery: 66% | • Medicine and pharmacology | Compared to non-users, CAM users more often had: |
| Get-Kong et al.[ | Self-management strategies weekly used: | • Medicine and pharmacology | |
| He et al.[ | • Resigned acceptance was associated with more difficulty in
self-care: | ||
| Norris et al.[ | Self-management strategies used: | • Lifestyle | • More physical exercise among patients with higher levels
of physical functioning: OR [95% CI] = 2.18 [1.07–4.42];
|
N: number; CAM: complementary and alternative medicine; p: p value; 95% CI: 95% confidence interval.
Scores on the Concerns Checklist (CCL) ranged from 0 (not at all worried) to 3 (very much worried).
r = Spearman correlation coefficient.
Effectiveness scores ranged from 0 to 10, with higher scores representing greater effectiveness.
Total summary scores reflected effectiveness of each behaviour used with equal weight for each of the behaviours. Global scores reflected a total rating of the effectiveness of each behaviour used, in which the weight of each behaviour may not be equal.
Non-experimental qualitative study results on healthcare professionals’ attitudes towards self-management of patients with advanced cancer (three studies).
| First author | Attitudes towards patient self-management |
|---|---|
| Campling et al.[ | • With regard to patients who adopted an advocacy role in
medication management, nurses emphasised the importance of
getting the right drug, via the right route. |
| Hughes et al.[ | • Desirable: |
| Johnston et al.[ | • Healthcare professionals found it important to view patients from a holistic rather than an illness perspective in terms of both self-management and care and treatment by others. |
N: number.