Jennifer Ashby1, Miria Toveg1, Helen Ye1, Lee Hullender Rubin1, Sanjay Reddy1,2, Maria T Chao1,3. 1. Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA. 2. Division of Hospital Medicine, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA. 3. Division of General Internal Medicine, University of California-San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Abstract
Background and Objective: Pain is a highly prevalent and distressing experience of hospitalized patients with cancer, and undertreatment is a challenging issue. Adding nonpharmacologic treatments such as acupuncture to conventional pain management may help address a patient's total pain experience. A dearth of acupuncture treatment guidelines exists, leaving individual practitioners to develop treatments themselves. The aim of the work described in this report was to develop a standardized clinical reference manual for East Asian Medicine (EAM) assessment, diagnosis, and acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Design: The acupuncture manual was developed based on: (1) a narrative review of existing literature on acupuncture and cancer pain; (2) a review of acupuncture charting notes of more than 200 treatments provided in an inpatient setting; and (3) meetings of an expert panel of senior acupuncturists to reach consensus on a manual protocol. Results: The resulting manual described diagnosis of patients based on EAM constitution, symptoms and signs, and channel location of the cancer-related pain symptoms. The resulting point selections for acupuncture treatment enables adaptability, reproducibility, and individualized acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Conclusions: The manual fills a vital gap in the current literature, and supports community- and hospital-based acupuncturists as a standardized clinical reference. The manual provides guidance for cancer-related pain management, using EAM acupuncture in hospitalized patients. Copyright 2022, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers.
Background and Objective: Pain is a highly prevalent and distressing experience of hospitalized patients with cancer, and undertreatment is a challenging issue. Adding nonpharmacologic treatments such as acupuncture to conventional pain management may help address a patient's total pain experience. A dearth of acupuncture treatment guidelines exists, leaving individual practitioners to develop treatments themselves. The aim of the work described in this report was to develop a standardized clinical reference manual for East Asian Medicine (EAM) assessment, diagnosis, and acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Design: The acupuncture manual was developed based on: (1) a narrative review of existing literature on acupuncture and cancer pain; (2) a review of acupuncture charting notes of more than 200 treatments provided in an inpatient setting; and (3) meetings of an expert panel of senior acupuncturists to reach consensus on a manual protocol. Results: The resulting manual described diagnosis of patients based on EAM constitution, symptoms and signs, and channel location of the cancer-related pain symptoms. The resulting point selections for acupuncture treatment enables adaptability, reproducibility, and individualized acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Conclusions: The manual fills a vital gap in the current literature, and supports community- and hospital-based acupuncturists as a standardized clinical reference. The manual provides guidance for cancer-related pain management, using EAM acupuncture in hospitalized patients. Copyright 2022, Mary Ann Liebert, Inc., publishers.
Entities:
Keywords:
Traditional Chinese Medicine; acupuncture; complementary and alternative medicine; inpatient; oncology; pain management
Authors: John J B Allen; Rosa N Schnyer; Andrea S Chambers; Sabrina K Hitt; Francisco A Moreno; Rachel Manber Journal: J Clin Psychiatry Date: 2006-11 Impact factor: 4.384
Authors: M H J van den Beuken-van Everdingen; J M de Rijke; A G Kessels; H C Schouten; M van Kleef; J Patijn Journal: Ann Oncol Date: 2007-03-12 Impact factor: 32.976
Authors: Hugh MacPherson; Douglas G Altman; Richard Hammerschlag; Li Youping; Wu Taixiang; Adrian White; David Moher Journal: PLoS Med Date: 2010-06-08 Impact factor: 11.069
Authors: Wolf E Mehling; Bradly Jacobs; Michael Acree; Leslie Wilson; Alan Bostrom; Jeremy West; Joseph Acquah; Beverly Burns; Jnani Chapman; Frederick M Hecht Journal: J Pain Symptom Manage Date: 2007-03 Impact factor: 3.612
Authors: M Kay Garcia; Lorenzo Cohen; Michael Spano; Amy Spelman; Yousra Hashmi; Alejandro Chaoul; Qi Wei; Gabriel Lopez Journal: Integr Cancer Ther Date: 2017-01-04 Impact factor: 3.279
Authors: Agnieszka Dawczak-Dębicka; Joanna Kufel-Grabowska; Mikołaj Bartoszkiewicz; Adrian Perdyan; Jacek Jassem Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health Date: 2022-04-21 Impact factor: 4.614