| Literature DB >> 36172038 |
Cristiane Aparecida Gomes-Ferraz1, Gabriela Rezende2, Amanda Antunes Fagundes2, Marysia Mara Rodrigues do Prado De Carlo3.
Abstract
The promotion of comfort and quality of life of people with cancer in palliative care requires flawless evaluation and management of pain, understood in its multidimensionality and integrality. The objective of this study was to present an overview of the scientific production referring to evaluation of the pain and total pain of patients with advanced cancer in palliative care. The study involved an integrative literature review, searching the databases PubMed, Embase, Cinahl, Lilacs and Web of Science using the descriptors 'Total Pain', 'Cancer Pain', 'Pain', 'Symptom Assessment', 'Pain Measurement', 'Pain Evaluation', 'Neoplasms', 'Cancer', 'Tumor', 'Palliative Care', 'Hospice Care', and 'Terminal Care'. To select the studies, the authors used the reference manager Mendeley and the application Rayyan™, as well as blind and independent peer review. Twenty-two articles were selected, published between 2002 and 2020 in different countries, and classified into two thematic units: 'Physical, social, emotional, and spiritual factors related to pain in cancer' (N = 13) and 'Importance of the overall evaluation and multidisciplinary team in the management of pain' (N = 9). Advanced cancer is associated with high mortality, a decline in health status, the presence of pain, and complex psychosocial concerns. Pain and symptoms in patients in palliative care should be evaluated as a whole and controlled thorough the work of an interdisciplinary team. The qualitative synthesis of the results demonstrates that most of the evaluated studies have a mixed nature; there are significant methodological differences among them and a low level of evidence in studies relating to the subject of pain evaluation in palliative care.Entities:
Keywords: cancer; integrative review; palliative care; total pain
Year: 2022 PMID: 36172038 PMCID: PMC9511321 DOI: 10.1177/26323524221125244
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Palliat Care Soc Pract ISSN: 2632-3524
Figure 1.Search mechanism of the integrative review, from PRISMA FlowDiagram (Brazil, 2021).
Synthesis of articles of unit 1: the multidimensionality of pain in cancer (N = 13).
| Author/journal | Place/ | Method | Main outcomes | IF | LE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thematic unit 1 ( | Mystakidou | Greece | Cross-sectional study | The intensity of pain significantly interferes in the general activity, humor, work, and life enjoyment. Significant associations were found between the interference of pain in “humor” and “life enjoyment” and hopelessness, as well as between pain with depression and cognitive state | 0.495 | VI |
| Hackett | United Kingdom | Qualitative study | Pain was classified as dynamic. According to patients and caregivers, the relief and treatment of pain are not assured once and for all. The main motivators for looking for help and actions of patients to control pain were the sensory experiences and the meaning associated with pain, not related to the beliefs about analgesia | 1.657 | VI | |
| O’Connor | United Kingdom | Secondary analysis of clinical data | Pain is strongly associated with emotional distress and this association is independent of gender, primary diagnosis of cancer, and the presence of active disease. Causal relationships between pain and emotional distress are complex and support the hypothesis that pain can increase anguish and anguish can also increase pain | 1.316 | VI | |
| Pathmawathi | Malaysia | Qualitative study | Participants understood pain as an unbearable experience that caused suffering in their lives. They saw their experience of pain as an indicator of disease progression, and such occurrences of pain may be an indicator of propagation of the disease | 0.447 | VI | |
| Arnold
| Canada | Cross-sectional study of mixed methods | Patients’ perceptions of end-of-life needs are multidimensional, often ambiguous and uncertain. Communication is fundamental to provide ideal palliative care. | 1.056 | VI | |
| Black | USA | Correlational descriptive study | Older cancer patients experience pain and not painful symptoms that can affect and confound the treatment of other symptoms and interfere in patient’s general quality of life. Palliative care may have a positive impact on the severity of pain and related suffering, as well as in patients’ quality of life as they get closer to death | 0.911 | VI | |
| Tishelman | Sweden | Cross-sectional study | High prevalence of symptoms was found in all the subgroups, with higher intensity in the subgroups closer to death, indicating the need for prophylactic and proactive treatment of symptoms | 44.544 | VI | |
| Gryschek | Brazil | Cross-sectional study | A significant relationship between psychological pain and the mechanisms of negative spiritual coping was identified. Depression and anxiety symptoms were significantly associated and religious/spiritual coping was associated with depressive symptoms | 0.663 | VI | |
| Rawdin | USA | Cross-sectional study | Findings suggest that hope is more closely related to the psychosocial elements of the experience of pain than to its intensity. Depressive symptoms and spiritual well-being interfered in the experience of pain of patients, influencing their beliefs, attitudes, and interpretations of pain | 0.929 | VI | |
| Koyama | Japan | Retrospective study | Female patients were more likely to suffer from psychosocial problems, such as changes in appearance, family problems and sexuality issues, whereas male patients were more likely to have spiritual pain | 0.318 | IV | |
| Malhotra | Singapore | Cohort study | Financial difficulties were associated with worse physical, psychological, social and spiritual results and less quality of the coordination and capacity of response to health care, less meaning and less peace, and low levels of hope. Patients with financial difficulties may benefit from interventions to promote their spiritual well-being with a patient-centered holistic approach at end of life | 1.062 | IV | |
| Meeker | USA | Cross-sectional study | Significant levels of emotional and financial distress and general suffering were identified. These factors were interrelated with financial and emotional stress, contributing to general suffering | 1.392 | VI | |
| Muñoz | Chile | Cross-sectional study | The evaluation and management of total pain, when reached, improve the quality of life and psychological well-being of the cancer patient and their family and other meaningful people | 0.139 | VI |
IF, impact factor; LE, level of evidence.
Synthesis of articles of unit 2: overall evaluation and management of pain by the multidisciplinary team (N = 8).
| Author/journal | Place/year | Method | Main outcomes | IF | LE | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thematic unit 2 ( | Pidgeon | Australia | Cross-sectional study | Patients have physical and psychosocial worries, often complex and classified as ‘severe’. They frequently experience high levels of pain, as well as other symptoms and psychosocial concerns. Participants in palliative care services reported higher levels of depressive feelings, family anxiety, and worries about practical issues than participants in community contexts | 0.853 | VI |
| Lin | Taiwan | Cross-sectional study | The undertreatment of pain is highly prevalent and negatively affects patients’ physical and psychological functioning. The strategies to overcome barriers to the effective control of pain should be optimized to better alleviate pain of cancer patients | 0.611 | VI | |
| Didwaniya | USA | Case study | The reported case highlights the importance of timely multidisciplinary intervention and the use of the acute palliative care unit, which resulted in the appropriate control of pain after several medical and invasive procedures that caused toxicities | 1.968 | VI | |
| Erol | Turkey | Qualitative descriptive study | Patients with advanced cancer who had pain experienced anxiety, helplessness, hopelessness, and many restrictions in their daily life, as well as incapacity to control pain. Most patients are not satisfied with nursing care in terms of pain management | 0.753 | VI | |
| Mori | USA | Study of three clinical cases | The cases demonstrate the complexity of the management of pain in cancer and report that the multidisciplinary approach can effectively alleviate severe pain, providing multimodal treatment, detecting and generating treatment side effects, and addressing underlying psychosocial distress and chemical coping | 0.929 | VI | |
| Reddy | USA | Case study | Psychological factors, delirium, and family suffering may contribute to the increase of pain. A full interdisciplinary approach to address total pain in patients with advanced cancer may relieve the need for invasive interventions and facilitate a safe discharge into the community | 1.316 | VI | |
| Satija | India | Case study | The case reflects that good communication of professionals with the patient and caregivers helps them accept their life situation more easily and reduces the psychological load of pain. The team addressed spiritual concerns as part of routine care. The patient was able to accept his situation better, his anger decreased, and he was ready to resume treatment | 0.327 | VI | |
| Butler | USA | Randomized study | Specialized clinical interventions are particularly necessary for cancer patients as they get closer to death. Intervention studies with patients with advanced disease showed psychological distress and pain when death was close in the evaluation of psychological results | 1.731 | VI |
IF, impact factor; LE, level of evidence.