Pain in Long-Term Cancer Survivors: Prevalence and Impact in a Cohort Composed Mostly of Breast Cancer Survivors

Author:

Pérez Concepción1ORCID,Ochoa Dolores1,Sánchez Noelia1,Ballesteros Ana Isabel2,Santidrián Sheila1,López Isabel1,Mondéjar Rebeca2,Carnaval Thiago3ORCID,Villoria Jesús3,Colomer Ramón2ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Pain Clinic, Hospital de La Princesa, 28006 Madrid, Spain

2. Department of Clinical Oncology, Hospital de la Princesa, 28006 Madrid, Spain

3. Department of Design and Biometrics, Medicxact, S.L., 28430 Alpedrete, Spain

Abstract

Cancer survival is becoming more common which means that there is now a growing population of cancer survivors, in whom pain may be common. However, its prevalence has hardly been addressed systematically. We aimed to assess the prevalence and explore the pathophysiology and impact of pain on health outcomes in cancer survivors. We conducted a retrospective–prospective cohort study in cancer-free patients diagnosed with cancer at least five years before the study start date. We used multivariable regression to establish the association of patients’ cancer characteristics with pain, and then the association of patients’ pain features with health outcomes and related symptoms. Between March and July 2021, 278 long-term cancer survivors were evaluated. Almost half of them (130/278, 46.8%) had pain, of whom 58.9% had a probable neuropathic component, but only 18 (13.8%) were taking specific drugs for neuropathic pain. A history of surgery-related pain syndrome in breast cancer patients was more than twice as frequent in the pain cohort. Post-chemotherapy and post-radiotherapy pain syndromes were uncommon. Pain was associated with lower QoL, emotional functioning, professional performance, and disability scores. Pain is a frequent health determinant in cancer survivors. Referral to specialised pain services may be a reasonable move in some cases.

Funder

Grünenthal Pharma, S. A.

Publisher

MDPI AG

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