Managing chronic pain after breast cancer treatments: are web-based interventions the future?

Author:

Hartup Sue1,Briggs Michelle23

Affiliation:

1. St James’s University Hospital, Leeds Teaching Hospitals NHS Trust, Leeds

2. Pain Research Institute, School of Health Sciences, Faculty of Health and Life Science University of Liverpool

3. Liverpool University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust, Liverpool, UK

Abstract

Purpose of the review Chronic post-treatment pain in breast cancer affects a high proportion of patients. Symptom burden and financial costs are increasingly impacting patients and healthcare systems because of improved treatments and survival rates. Supporting long-term breast cancer symptoms using novel methodology has been examined, yet few have explored the opportunity to utilise these interventions for prevention. This review aims to explore the need for, range of, and effectiveness of such interventions. Recent findings Three papers describe risk factors for chronic pain, with six recent papers describing the use of interventions for acute pain in the surgical setting. The evidence for the effectiveness of these interventions to improve pain management in this setting is limited but tentatively positive. The results have to take into account the variation between systems and limited testing. Summary Multiple types of intervention emerged and appear well accepted by patients. Most assessed short-term impact and did not evaluate for reduction in chronic pain. Such interventions require rigorous effectiveness testing to meet the growing needs of post-treatment pain in breast cancer. A detailed understanding of components of web-based interventions and their individual impact on acute pain and chronic pain is needed within future optimisation trials. Their effectiveness as preventative tools are yet to be decided.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine,Oncology (nursing),Oncology,General Medicine

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