A literature synthesis of symptom prevalence and severity in persons receiving active cancer treatment

被引:271
作者
Reilly, Carolyn Miller [1 ]
Bruner, Deborah Watkins [1 ]
Mitchell, Sandra A. [2 ]
Minasian, Lori M. [2 ]
Basch, Ethan [3 ]
Dueck, Amylou C. [4 ]
Cella, David [5 ]
Reeve, Bryce B. [3 ]
机构
[1] Emory Univ, Nell Hodgson Woodruff Sch Nursing, Atlanta, GA 30322 USA
[2] NCI, Bethesda, MD 20892 USA
[3] Univ N Carolina, Chapel Hill, NC USA
[4] Mayo Clin, Scottsdale, AZ USA
[5] Northwestern Univ, Feinberg Sch Med, Chicago, IL 60611 USA
关键词
Cancer; Symptoms; Systematic review; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; MULTIPLE SYMPTOMS; BREAST-CANCER; LUNG-CANCER; COLORECTAL-CANCER; JAPANESE VERSION; VALIDATION; CLUSTERS; PAIN; MANAGEMENT;
D O I
10.1007/s00520-012-1688-0
中图分类号
R73 [肿瘤学];
学科分类号
100214 ;
摘要
Patients with cancer experience acute and chronic symptoms caused by their underlying disease or by the treatment. While numerous studies have examined the impact of various treatments on symptoms experienced by cancer patients, there are inconsistencies regarding the symptoms measured and reported in treatment trials. This article presents a systematic review of the research literature of the prevalence and severity of symptoms in patients undergoing cancer treatment. A systematic search for studies of persons receiving active cancer treatment was performed with the search terms of "multiple symptoms" and "cancer" for studies involving patients over the age of 18 years and published in English during the years 2001 to 2011. Search outputs were reviewed independently by seven authors, resulting in the synthesis of 21 studies meeting criteria for generation of an Evidence Table reporting symptom prevalence and severity ratings. Data were extracted from 21 multi-national studies to develop a pooled sample of 4,067 cancer patients in whom the prevalence and severity of individual symptoms was reported. In total, the pooled sample across the 21 studies was comprised of 62 % female, with a mean age of 58 years (range 18 to 97 years). A majority (62 %) of these studies assessed symptoms in homogeneous samples with respect to tumor site (predominantly breast and lung cancer), while 38 % of the included studies utilized samples with mixed diagnoses and treatment regimens. Eighteen instruments and structured interviews were including those measuring single symptoms, multi-symptom inventories, and single symptom items drawn from HRQOL or health status measures. The MD Anderson Symptom Inventory was the most commonly used instrument in the studies analyzed (n = 9 studies; 43 %), while the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Subscale, Medical Outcomes Survey Short Form-36, and Symptom Distress Scale were each employed in two studies. Forty-seven symptoms were identified across the 21 studies which were then categorized into 17 logical groupings. Symptom prevalence and severity were calculated across the entire cohort and also based upon sample sizes in which the symptoms were measured providing the ability to rank symptoms. Symptoms are prevalent and severe among patients with cancer. Therefore, any clinical study seeking to evaluate the impact of treatment on patients should consider including measurement of symptoms. This study demonstrates that a discrete set of symptoms is common across cancer types. This set may serve as the basis for defining a "core" set of symptoms to be recommended for elicitation across cancer clinical trials, particularly among patients with advanced disease.
引用
收藏
页码:1525 / 1550
页数:26
相关论文
共 61 条
[1]   Predictors of Depression Among Older African American Cancer Patients [J].
Agarwal, Mansi ;
Hamilton, Jill B. ;
Moore, Charles E. ;
Crandell, Jamie L. .
CANCER NURSING, 2010, 33 (02) :156-163
[2]   Symptom burden in patients undergoing autologous stem-cell transplantation [J].
Anderson, K. O. ;
Giralt, S. A. ;
Mendoza, T. R. ;
Brown, J. O. ;
Neumann, J. L. ;
Mobley, G. M. ;
Wang, X. S. ;
Cleeland, C. S. .
BONE MARROW TRANSPLANTATION, 2007, 39 (12) :759-766
[3]   Quality of life during potentially curative treatment for locally advanced oesophageal cancer [J].
Avery, K. N. L. ;
Metcalfe, C. ;
Barham, C. P. ;
Alderson, D. ;
Falk, S. J. ;
Blazeby, J. M. .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF SURGERY, 2007, 94 (11) :1369-1376
[4]   Beyond the FDA PRO Guidance: Steps toward Integrating Meaningful Patient-Reported Outcomes into Regulatory Trials and US Drug Labels [J].
Basch, Ethan .
VALUE IN HEALTH, 2012, 15 (03) :401-403
[5]   The Missing Voice of Patients in Drug-Safety Reporting [J].
Basch, Ethan .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 2010, 362 (10) :865-869
[6]   Adverse Symptom Event Reporting by Patients vs Clinicians: Relationships With Clinical Outcomes [J].
Basch, Ethan ;
Jia, Xiaoyu ;
Heller, Glenn ;
Barz, Allison ;
Sit, Laura ;
Fruscione, Michael ;
Appawu, Mark ;
Iasonos, Alexia ;
Atkinson, Thomas ;
Goldfarb, Shari ;
Culkin, Ann ;
Kris, Mark G. ;
Schrag, Deborah .
JNCI-JOURNAL OF THE NATIONAL CANCER INSTITUTE, 2009, 101 (23) :1624-1632
[7]   The symptom experience in the first 100 days following allogeneic hematopoietic stem cell transplantation (HSCT) [J].
Bevans, Margaret F. ;
Mitchell, Sandra A. ;
Marden, Susan .
SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER, 2008, 16 (11) :1243-1254
[8]   The Nested Structure of Cancer Symptoms Implications for Analyzing Co-occurrence and Managing Symptoms [J].
Bhavriani, S. K. ;
Bellala, G. ;
Ganesan, A. ;
Krishna, R. ;
Saxman, P. ;
Scott, C. ;
Silveira, M. ;
Given, C. .
METHODS OF INFORMATION IN MEDICINE, 2010, 49 (06) :581-591
[9]  
Borneman T, 2008, ONCOL NURS FORUM, V35, P509
[10]   The Experience of a Sore Mouth and Associated Symptoms in Patients With Cancer Receiving Outpatient Chemotherapy [J].
Brown, Carlton G. ;
McGuire, Deborah B. ;
Peterson, Douglas E. ;
Beck, Susan L. ;
Dudley, William N. ;
Mooney, Kathleen H. .
CANCER NURSING, 2009, 32 (04) :259-270