Management of side effects during and post-treatment in breast cancer survivors

Oxana Palesh, Caroline Scheiber, Shelli Kesler, Karen Mustian, Cheryl Koopman, Lidia Schapira

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

95 Scopus citations

Abstract

Cancer-related fatigue, insomnia, and cancer-related cognitive impairment are commonly experienced symptoms that share psychological and physical manifestations. One or more of these symptoms will affect nearly all patients at some point during their course of treatment or survivorship. These side effects are burdensome and reduce patients' quality of life well beyond their cancer diagnosis and associated care treatments. Cancer-related fatigue, insomnia, and cancer-related cognitive impairment are likely to have multiple etiologies that make it difficult to identify the most effective method to manage them. In this review, we summarized the information on cancer-related fatigue, insomnia, and cancer-related cognitive impairment incidence and prevalence among breast cancer patients and survivors as well as recent research findings on pharmaceutical, psychological, and exercise interventions that have shown effectiveness in the treatment of these side effects. Our review revealed that most current pharmaceutical interventions tend to ameliorate symptoms only temporarily without addressing the underlying causes. Exercise and behavioral interventions are consistently more effective at managing chronic symptoms and possibly address an underlying etiology. Future research is needed to investigate effective interventions that can be delivered directly in clinic to a large portion of patients and survivors.

Original languageEnglish (US)
Pages (from-to)167-175
Number of pages9
JournalBreast Journal
Volume24
Issue number2
DOIs
StatePublished - Mar 1 2018

Keywords

  • breast cancer patients and survivors
  • cancer-related side effects
  • review article
  • symptom management

ASJC Scopus subject areas

  • Internal Medicine
  • Surgery
  • Oncology

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