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Management of Fatigue in Patients with Advanced Cancer.

Current treatment options in oncology
February 1, 2023
Patrick Stone et al. (8 authors)
Journal ArticleReviewHuman Study
Study Details

Study Goal

The researchers aimed to evaluate the effectiveness and safety of aerobic exercise, specifically walking, in managing fatigue among cancer patients, particularly those with advanced or metastatic disease.

Results Summary

The study found that walking, as a form of aerobic exercise, has benefits in reducing fatigue in cancer patients, especially those with earlier-stage disease or undergoing active treatment. The evidence for walking is stronger compared to other interventions like medications, though the mechanisms may differ in advanced disease.

Population

Cancer patients, particularly those with locally advanced or metastatic incurable disease, as well as earlier-stage patients and cancer survivors.

Effective Dosage

Not specified

Duration

Not specified

Interactions

None mentioned

Extracted Claims (11)
InterventionDirectionEndpointPopulationDosageImpactClaim #
aerobic exercise
decrease
fatigue
patients with earlier stage disease, those undergoing active treatment and in cancer survivors
-
can have benefits
#1
yoga
decrease
fatigue
patients with earlier stage disease, those undergoing active treatment and in cancer survivors
-
can have benefits
#2
cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT)
decrease
fatigue
patients with earlier stage disease, those undergoing active treatment and in cancer survivors
-
can have benefits
#3
psycho-educational interventions
decrease
fatigue
patients with earlier stage disease, those undergoing active treatment and in cancer survivors
-
can have benefits
#4
methylphenidate
decrease
fatigue
-
-
less strong evidence supports the use
#5
ginseng
decrease
fatigue
-
-
less strong evidence supports the use
#6
aerobic exercise (e.g. walking)
decrease
fatigue
those who are still mobile
-
recommend the cautious use
#7
psycho-educational approaches
decrease
fatigue
those patients who are able to engage in such forms of therapy
-
advise considering the use
#8
CBT
decrease
fatigue
those patients who are able to engage in such forms of therapy
-
advise considering the use
#9
dexamethasone (short-term use)
decrease
fatigue
patients near the end-of-life
-
advise use
#10
other pharmacological treatments
decrease
fatigue
patients near the end-of-life
-
advise use only on the basis of a clinical trial
#11
Abstract

Fatigue is a common and distressing symptom experienced by patients with cancer. It is most common in patients with locally advanced or metastatic incurable disease. It can have profound effects on quality-of-life and physical functioning. In addition to general supportive measures (directed at tackling contributory conditions and comorbidities), a variety of specific interventions have been developed which can be broadly categorised as physical therapies, psychological therapies or medication. There is some evidence that each of these approaches can have benefits in patients with earlier stage disease, those undergoing active treatment and in cancer survivors. The best evidence is for aerobic exercise, yoga, cognitive-behavioural therapy (CBT) and psycho-educational interventions. Less strong evidence supports the use of medications such as methylphenidate or ginseng. In patients with advanced disease, it is likely that the mechanisms of fatigue or the factors contributing to fatigue maintenance may be different. Relatively fewer studies have been undertaken in this group and the evidence is correspondingly weaker. The authors recommend the cautious use of aerobic exercise (e.g. walking) in those who are still mobile. The authors advise considering the use of psycho-educational approaches or CBT in those patients who are able to engage in such forms of therapy. In patients near the end-of-life, the authors advise use of dexamethasone (short-term use) and other pharmacological treatments only on the basis of a clinical trial.

Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)
HumansFatigueQuality of LifeExerciseExercise TherapyNeoplasmsNeoplasms, Second Primary
Study Links
Quality Scores
Safety85
Efficacy75/10
Quality80/10
Citation Metrics
Total Citations11
Citations/Year5.5
Relative Citation Ratio2.68
NIH Percentile82.4%
Research Impact Scores
APT Score0.95
Weight Score2.84
Normalized Score0.80
Related Supplements
Management of Fatigue in Patients with Advanced Cancer. | Panacea Index