| Literature DB >> 32080785 |
Theodora Ogle1, Kimberly Alexander2, Christine Miaskowski2,3, Patsy Yates2.
Abstract
PURPOSE: A small number of studies report that patients with peripheral neuropathy (PN) who engage in activities that promote a sense of personal well-being and provide physical, emotional, or spiritual comfort have a better quality of life and higher levels of adjustment to the changes generated by their illness and accompanying symptoms. This systematic review sought to evaluate the effectiveness of self-management activities that patients with PN initiate themselves to relieve PN symptoms and improve quality of life.Entities:
Keywords: Pain; Patient reported outcomes; Peripheral neuropathy; Quality of life; Self-management intervention; Symptoms
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 32080785 PMCID: PMC7360651 DOI: 10.1007/s11764-020-00861-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Cancer Surviv ISSN: 1932-2259 Impact factor: 4.442
Demographic characteristics of participants in included studies
| Type of intervention | First author (year) | Design | Cause of PN | Grade of PN | No. of subjects | Age (years) ( | Female | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| IG | CG | IG | CG | |||||||||
| Hot bath/massage | Park and Park (2015) [ | Experimental | CIPN | Grade II = 58.3% Grade III = 41.7% | 24 | 24 | 57.08, 11.52 | 60.79, 8.97 | 37.5 | |||
| Meditation | Clark et al. (2012) [ | RCT | CIPN | Not specified | A 7 | B 7 | C 5 | D 7 | 59.04, 8.56 | 88.5 | ||
| Nathan et al. 2017 [ | RCT | CIPN | 30 | 32 | 59.7, 9.1 | 59.8, 8.7 | 56 | |||||
| Teixeira (2010) [ | RCT | CIPN | Not specified | 10 | 10 | 74.6, 10.8 | 75 | |||||
| Exercise | Ahn and Song (2012) [ | Experimental | DPN | Not specified | 20 | 19 | 66.05, 6.42 | 62.73, 7.53 | 48.7 | |||
| Dixit et al. (2014) [ | RCT | DPN | Minimum score of 7 on MDNS | 29 | 37 | 54.40, 1.24 | 59.45, 1.16 | 43.6 | ||||
| Kluding et al. (2012) [ | Experimental | DPN | Not specified | 17 | 58.4, 5.98 | 53 | ||||||
| McCrary et al. (2019) [ | Experimental | CIPN | ≥ 2 on CTCAE v.4.03 | 29 | 61.6 ( | 72.4 | ||||||
| Ruhland and Shields (1997) [ | Experimental | CIDN | Not specified | 14 | 14 | 63.6, 10.5 | 52.9, 16.2 | 32 | ||||
| Yoo et al. (2015) [ | Experimental | DPN | Not specified | 14 | 57, 5.11 | 64.3 | ||||||
| TENS | Forst et al. (2004) [ | RCT | DPN | ≥ 4 and ≤ 16 on NTSS-6 | 12 | 7 | 57.6, 11.5 | 59.4, 8.6 | 47 | |||
| Gewandter et al. (2018) [ | Experimental | CIPN | ≥ 4 on NRS 1–10 | 22 | Mdn 56, IQR 53–63 | 59 | ||||||
| Kumar & Marshall (1997) [ | RCT | DPN | Not specified | 18 | 13 | 53, 4 | 59, 3 | 61 | ||||
| Reichstein et al. (2005) [ | RCT | DPN | TSS: HF TENS | HF 20 | TENS 21 | HF 64.2, 12.7 | TENS 57.8, 12.5 | 43.2 | ||||
| Serry et al. (2015) [ | RCT | DPN | Not specified | A 20 | B 20 | C 20 | A 51.6, 4.75 | B 51.7, 4.44 | C 51.7, 4.44 | 53 | ||
| Tonezzer et al. (2017) [ | RCT | CIPN | Grade I or II on CTCAE | 11 | 13 | 52.7, 9.0 | 46.3, 13.7 | 20.8 | ||||
IG = intervention group; CG = control group; M = mean; SD = standard deviation; RCT = randomized controlled trial; PN = peripheral neuropathy; CIPN = chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; DPN = diabetic peripheral neuropathy; CIDN = chronic inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy; BPI = Brief Pain Inventory; MDNS = Michigan Diabetic Neuropathy Score; NTSS-6 = New Total Symptom Score; NRS = Numerical Rating Scale; TSS = Total Symptom Score; Mdn = median; IQR = interquartile range; HF = high-frequency muscle stimulation; TENS = transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation; CTCAE = Common Terminology Criteria for Adverse Events
Self-reported symptom outcomes: summary of measures and results
| First author (year) | Purpose and intervention | Outcome measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Ahn and Song (2012)[ | Intervention: 1 h of tai chi per session, twice a week for 12 weeks. Control: Usual care | Total Symptom Score (TSS) questionnaire | Differences in pre- and post-test mean TSS indicated significant symptom improvement in the intervention group (mean change from |
| Reichstein et al. (2005)[ | HF group received HF for 30 min for 3 consecutive days. TENS group received TENS therapy for 30 min for 3 consecutive days. | Total Symptom Score (TSS) questionnaire | Differences in pre- and post-test mean TSS indicated significant symptom improvement in both groups: HF group mean reduced from |
| Dixit et al. (2014)[ | Intervention: Exercise training in the range of 40–60% of heart-rate reserve (HRR) within a rating of perceived exertion (RPE) (scale ranging from 6 to 20). Delivered 5–6 days of the week for 8 weeks, accumulating a minimum of 150 min/week to a maximum of 360 min/week. Control: Standard medical care, education for foot care and diet | Michigan Diabetic Neuropathy Score (MDNS) | Mean MDNS score significantly reduced across sensory, motor, and reflex subsets for the intervention group between baseline and the 8th week ( |
| Kluding et al. (2012)[ | Intervention: A 10-week exercise program with both aerobic and strengthening elements, 3 to 4 times per week. Control: None | Michigan Neuropathy Screening Instrument (MNSI) symptom questionnaire | Overall mean MNSI symptom score decreased significantly ( |
| Gewandter et al. (2018)[ | Intervention: Wireless TENS therapy for at least 1 h twice per day for a 6-week period. Control: None | European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer-CIPN20 (EORTC-CIPN20) | EORTC-CIPN20 median baseline scores reduced from 39.5 (IQR 31–47.3) to Mdn 34.5 (IQR 28.8–41.8, |
| McCrary et al. (2019)[ | Intervention: An 8-week exercise intervention with resistance, balance, and cardio elements, 3 times per week. Control: An 8-week pre-intervention control period | CIPN symptom severity (European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer [EORTC] CIPN 20); Overall Disability (CIPN Rasch Built overall disability score [CIPN-R-ODS]) | Significant reduction in CIPN symptoms (CIPN-20 score) ( |
| Tonezzer et al. (2017)[ | Intervention group: 60 min of TENS daily for 45 days. Control: As with intervention with a sham machine | Visual Analogue Scale (VAS) assessing pain and other neuropathy-related symptoms. Chemotherapy-Induced Neurotoxicity Questionnaire (CINQ) to evaluate frequency of symptoms and interferences with daily activities | No significant findings on VAS or CINQ |
PN = peripheral neuropathy, M = mean; SD = standard deviation; TENS = transcutaneous nervous stimulation; CI = confidence interval; CIPN = chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; Mdn = median; SE = standard error
Pain outcomes: summary of measures and results
| First author (year) | Purpose and intervention | Outcome measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nathan et al. (2017)[ | Intervention: Nine sessions of MBSR: eight weekly, 2.5-h sessions and one 6-h session on a weekend day midway through the course. Control: Usual activities, offered the opportunity to enroll in a MBSR course once the study was complete | Brief Pain Inventory (BPI) score | BPI Pain Severity mean score decreased in the MBSR group ( |
| Yoo et al. (2015)[ | Intervention: 16 weeks of supervised aerobic exercise 3 times a week, of 30 to 50 min duration. Control: None | Various measures of pain and pain interference using the Brief Pain Inventory Short Form for Diabetic Peripheral Neuropathy (BPI-DPN) and a questionnaire devised by the authors. | Significant reductions in pain interference observed with walking on mean BPI-DPN score ( |
| Kluding et al. (2012)[ | Intervention: 10-week exercise program with both aerobic and strengthening elements, 3 to 4 times per week. Control: None | Michigan Neuropathy Screening Instrument (MNSI) symptom questionnaire | Worst pain MNSI mean score decreased ( |
| Forst et al. (2004)[ | Intervention: TENS therapy over 12 weeks, self-administered for at least 30 min per day. Control: Electrically inactive (sham) device | Various pain qualities were measured by the Neuropathy Total Symptom Score-6 (NTSS-6), i.e., lancinating, burning, and aching pain, numbness, prickling sensation, and allodynia; pain intensity measured using a Visual Analogue Scale (VAS). | Active TENS treatment resulted in a significant improvement in mean NTSS-6 score after 6 weeks (− 42%) and after 12 weeks (− 32%) of treatment (baseline |
| Kumar and Marshall (1997)[ | Intervention: TENS therapy over 4 weeks, self-administered for 30 min per day. Control: Electrically inactive (sham) device | Grading of pain intensity on a 0–5-point scale; perception of pain using a VAS | Significant reduction in pain grading for those in the intervention group, with the intervention group mean score declining from |
| Serry et al. (2015)[ | Group A: Received TENS therapy for 30 min 3 times per week for 8 weeks in addition to regular pharmacological therapy for PN. Group B: Engaged in aerobic exercise for 30 min 3 times for week for 8 weeks in addition to regular pharmacological therapy for PN. Group C: Received only regular pharmacological therapy for PN and oral hypoglycemic drugs or insulin. | Pain intensity evaluated using a VAS. | Compared to pharmacologic management, both the TENS and exercise groups had significant reductions in mean VAS pain score (TENS group 41.6% reduction, exercise group 16.7% reduction, |
| Reichstein et al. (2005)[ | HF group received HF for 30 min for 3 consecutive days. TENS group received TENS therapy for 30 min for 3 consecutive days. | 1–10 point Numerical Rating Scale (NRS) for pain, numbness, burning, parasthesias; or dysesthesia taken at baseline, after all treatment days and 2 days post-intervention. | Reductions in NRS pre and post both interventions; 7 out of 21 patients (33%) in the TENS group and 16 out of 20 patients (80%) in the HF group reported improvement in pain symptoms ( |
| Gewandter et al. (2018)[ | Intervention: Wireless TENS therapy for at least 1 h twice per day for a 6-week period. Control: None | Short Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2 (SF-MPQ-2); daily diary containing NRS from 0 to 10 for pain, numbness, tingling, and cramping | NRS median scores indicated reduced pain symptoms post-TENS: pain reduced from a baseline median of 6 (IQR 1.8–6.6) to Mdn 3.7 (IQR 0.42–5.5, |
| Tonezzer et al. (2017)[ | Intervention group: 60 min of TENS daily for 45 days. Control: As with intervention with a sham machine | VAS assessing pain and other neuropathy-related symptoms | No significant findings on VAS |
| Teixeira (2010)[ | Intervention: The treatment group received instruction in mindfulness meditation and were instructed to listen to guided CD 5 days per week over a 4-week period. Control: Nutritional advice and asked to maintain a food diary for 4 weeks | Pain level using Neuropathic Pain Scale (NPS) | No statistically significant differences between the groups’ post-intervention scores on the NPS |
PDPN = painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy; M = mean; CI = confidence interval; DPN = diabetic peripheral neuropathy; SD = standard deviation; PN = peripheral neuropathy; TENS = transcutaneous electrical nervous stimulation; n.s. = not significant; CIPN = chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; IQR = interquartile range; Mdn = median
Quality of life outcomes: summary of measures and results
| First author (year) | Purpose and intervention | Outcome measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Clark et al. (2012)[ | Intervention: A. Reiki intervention ( B. Yoga intervention ( C. Meditation intervention ( Control: One hour holistic education weekly for 6 weeks | Quality of life and PN using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapies—Gynecologic Group—Neurotoxicity Scale (FACT/GOG-NTx) | No significant difference between intervention groups on FACT/GOG-NTx. Subjects in the control group demonstrated significantly higher levels of neurotoxicity related QoL according to mean FACT/GOG-NTx score ( |
| Park and Park (2015)[ | Intervention group: One 30-min foot bath (temp 40 °C) session every other day, totaling 8 times over 2 weeks. Control: 30 min general massage sessions every other day, for a total of 8 times over 2 weeks | Quality of life (QoL) assessed using Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General (FACT-G) and Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy/Gynecologic Oncology Group/Neurotoxicity (FACT/GOG-NTx) | QoL (mean FACT-G score) increased in the foot bath group post-intervention ( |
| Dixit et al. (2014)[ | Intervention: Exercise training in the range of 40–60% of heart-rate reserve (HRR) within a rating of perceived exertion (RPE) (scale ranging from 6 to 20). Delivered 5–6 days of the week for 8 weeks, accumulating a minimum of 150 min/week to a maximum of 360 min/week. Control: Standard medical care, education for foot care and diet | Neuropathy quality of life (NQOL) score | Intervention group reported a reduction in mean NQOL score ( |
| Nathan et al., (2017)[ | Intervention: Nine sessions of MBSR: eight weekly, 2.5-h sessions and one 6-h session on a weekend day midway through the course. Control: Usual activities, offered the opportunity to enroll in a MBSR course once the study was complete | Patient Global Impression of Change (PGIC) for QoL; Short Form-12 Health Survey version 2 (SF-12); Neuropathy-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire (NQoL) | 14 of 30 in the MBSR group (46.7%) compared to 2 of 32 in the control group (6.2%) reported improvements in mean PGIC score at the 12-week follow-up (adjusted OR 18.8, 95% CIs [2.3–151.5], The MBSR group mean NQoL score indicated higher quality of life related to pain between baseline and week 12 ( |
| McCrary et al. (2019)[ | Intervention: 8-week exercise intervention with resistance, balance, and cardio elements, 3 times per week. Control: 8-week pre-intervention control period | Quality of Life (QoL) (SF-36) | Significant improvement in QoL (SF-36) ( |
| Ruhland and Shields (1997)[ | Intervention: Exercise with Thera-Bands and cycling or walking for 10 to 20 min, over 6 weeks. Control: Maintain current levels of activity | Medical Outcomes Study (MOS) 36-Item Short-Form Health Survey (SF-36) | Significant improvement within the role limitation (physical) dimension of the SF-36, with mean scores increasing from |
| Ahn and Song (2012)[ | Intervention: One hour of tai chi per session, twice a week for 12 weeks. Control: Usual care | Subjective: Korean version of the SF-36v2 (36-Item Short Form Health Survey version 2) | Significant improvement in mean SF-36v2 score for several subsets including physical function ( |
| Teixeira (2010)[ | Intervention: Treatment group received instruction in mindfulness meditation and were instructed to listen to guided CD 5 days per week over a 4-week period. Control: Nutritional advice and asked to maintain a food diary for 4 weeks | Quality of life using NQoL | No significant differences for adjusted overall QoL; symptom-related QoL; emotion-related QoL; sensory-motor related QoL; pain QoL |
CIPN = chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; M = mean; SD = standard deviation; PN = peripheral neuropathy; CI = confidence interval; PDPN = painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy; OR = odds ratio; SE = standard error; n.s. = not significant
Other outcomes: summary of measures and results
| First author (year) | Purpose and intervention | Outcome measures | Main findings |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nathan et al. (2017)[ | Intervention: Nine sessions of MBSR: eight weekly, 2.5-h sessions and one 6-h session on a weekend day midway through the course. Control: Usual activities, offered the opportunity to enroll in a MBSR course once the study was complete. | Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c) measurement; Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) for depression; Profile of Mood States-2A (POMS-2A) for total mood disturbance; Perceived Stress Scale (PSS); Pain Catastrophizing Scale (PCS) | Mean PCS score decreased in the MBSR group (− 10.67, 95% CIs [− 14.38 to − 6.95]), between baseline and week 12, compared to the control group (1.69, 95% CIs [− 1.47 to 4.85], |
| Clark et al. (2012)[ | Intervention: D. Reiki intervention ( E. Yoga intervention ( F. Meditation intervention ( Control: 1 h holistic education weekly for 6 weeks | Psychological distress using the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI); Mindfulness using the Mindful Awareness Attention Scale (MAAS). | No significant difference between groups on BSI and MAAS |
| Ahn and Song (2012)[ | Intervention: Standardized tai chi for diabetes of 1 h of tai chi per session, twice a week for 12 weeks. Control: Usual care | Fasting blood sugar (FBS); HbA1c; Semmes–Weinstein 10-g monofilament examination scores (SWME); single leg stance for balance. | Mean FBS reduced in the intervention group ( |
| Kluding et al. (2012)[ | Intervention: 10-week exercise program with both aerobic and strengthening elements, 3 to 4 times per week. Control: None | BMI; Resting heart rate (RHR) Glycosylated hemoglobin (HbA1c); Michigan Neuropathy Screening Instrument (MNSI) physical exam score; Nerve conduction studies (NCS); Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST); intraepidermal nerve fiber density (IENF) | Significant reduction in HbA1c ( |
| Ruhland and Shields (1997)[ | Intervention: Exercise with Thera-Bands and cycling or walking for 10 to 20 min, over 6 weeks. Control: Maintain current levels of activity | Average Muscle Score (AMS); handgrip force; forced vital capacity (FVC); timed 9.1 m walk | Significant improvement in mean AMS in exercise group (pre-test |
| Yoo et al. (2015)[ | Intervention: 16 weeks of supervised aerobic exercise 3 times a week, of 30 to 50 min duration. Control: None | Objective: body mass index (BMI); aerobic fitness (VO2max); blood pressure; glycemic control (hemoglobin A1c) | No significant changes were found for BMI, blood pressure, or glycemic control. Significant improvement in mean maximum oxygen uptake (VO2max) (mL/kg/min) ( |
| Gewandter et al. (2018)[ | Intervention: Wireless TENS therapy for at least 1 h twice per day for a 6-week period. Control: None | Objective: Utah Early Neuropathy Score (UENS); forced choice monofilament test | No significant improvements with UENS; monofilament test reported sensation threshold improved in 10 of 16 (63%; 95% CI [35–85%], |
| Serry et al. (2015)[ | Group A: Received TENS therapy for 30 min 3 times per week for 8 weeks in addition to regular pharmacological therapy for PN. Group B: Engaged in aerobic exercise for 30 min 3 times for week for 8 weeks in addition to regular pharmacological therapy for PN. Group C: Received only regular pharmacological therapy for PN and oral hypoglycemic drugs or insulin. | Nerve conduction studies (NCS) to measure medial plantar sensory nerve conduction velocity (SCV) | No significant differences in SCV between pre- and post-test measurements for any of the groups, or between the groups |
| McCrary et al. (2019)[ | Intervention: 8-week exercise intervention with resistance, balance, and cardio elements, 3 times per week. Control: 8 week pre-intervention control period | Objective: Total Neuropathy Score Clinical version (TNSc); mobility (6 min timed walk); standing balance (Swaymeter); lower limb strength and dynamic balance (5 times sit to stand test) | Significant reduction in TNSc symptom score ( |
PDPN = painful diabetic peripheral neuropathy; CI = confidence interval; M = mean; mg = milligram; dL = deciliter; SD = standard deviation; PN = peripheral neuropathy; kg = kilogram; min = minute; DPN = diabetic peripheral neuropathy; TENS = transcutaneous electrical nervous stimulation; CIPN = chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy; SE = standard error
Quality assessment of the included studies
*Studies have been grouped according to intervention type
Fig. 1Study selection process