Author Affiliations: The Nethersole School of Nursing, The Chinese University of Hong Kong, China (Drs So, D. N. S. Chan, C. W. H. Chan, Law, and Xing); and School of Nursing, University of Auckland, New Zealand (Dr McCarthy).
Cancer Nurs. 2020 Nov/Dec;43(6):E304-E327. doi: 10.1097/NCC.0000000000000730.
Cancer patients often experience multiple concurrent and related symptoms, or symptom clusters. Research increasingly indicates that targeting a symptom cluster as an overall entity instead of individual symptoms could be more effective and efficient in improving patients' quality of life. Various nonpharmacological interventions are used to manage symptom clusters in cancer patients during and after treatment, but the effect of such interventions is uncertain.
To provide a summary of such interventions and evaluate their effects in terms of symptom cluster severity, quality of life, and functional ability of patients with cancer.
A comprehensive literature search of 5 English and 2 Chinese electronic databases (PubMed, MEDLINE, EMBASE, PsycINFO, CINAHL, CNKI, and Wanfang) was combined with hand searching, to identify eligible research studies from 2001 to January 2018. Two reviewers carried out data selection, data extraction, and quality appraisal independently. A narrative approach was used to summarize data.
Thirteen randomized controlled trials, involving 1490 patients, were included in the review. The methodological quality of the studies was generally fair. Nonpharmacological interventions can reduce the severity of symptom clusters, especially the pain-fatigue-sleep disturbance, cognitive, and gastrointestinal clusters, and improve both quality of life and functional ability.
While symptom cluster interventions are potentially useful in cancer care, further well-designed research is needed to test them rigorously on various types of cancer symptom clusters.
Nonpharmacological interventions are shown to be effective in managing cancer-associated symptom clusters and could be considered as part of the existing healthcare services for cancer patients.
癌症患者常同时存在多种相关症状,即症状群。研究表明,针对症状群这一整体实体而非单一症状进行治疗,可能更有助于提高患者的生活质量。在癌症患者的治疗期间和治疗后,有多种非药物干预措施可用于控制症状群,但这些干预措施的效果尚不确定。
对这些干预措施进行总结,并评估其对癌症患者症状群严重程度、生活质量和功能能力的影响。
通过对 5 个英文数据库(PubMed、MEDLINE、EMBASE、PsycINFO、CINAHL)和 2 个中文数据库(CNKI、万方)进行全面的文献检索,并结合手工检索,于 2001 年 1 月至 2018 年 1 月间收集了符合条件的研究。由 2 名评审员独立进行数据选择、数据提取和质量评估。采用叙述性方法对数据进行总结。
共纳入 13 项随机对照试验,涉及 1490 例患者。研究的方法学质量总体尚可。非药物干预措施可减轻症状群的严重程度,尤其是疼痛-疲劳-睡眠障碍、认知和胃肠道症状群,并改善生活质量和功能能力。
尽管针对症状群的干预措施在癌症护理中具有潜在的应用价值,但仍需要进一步进行精心设计的研究,以严格检验其对各种癌症症状群的效果。
非药物干预措施在控制癌症相关症状群方面显示出有效性,可被视为癌症患者现有医疗服务的一部分。