Newswise — Among the 7.8 million women with breast cancer worldwide, at least 33% to 44% are affected by lymphatic pain. Breast cancer survivors usually suffer lymphatic pain in the ipsilateral body or upper limb, and pharmacological approaches are not effective for lymphatic pain.
In a recent publication (doi: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wcn.2024.04.001) in Women and Children Nursing, a group of researchers from the United States and Spain further deepened our understanding of this particular type of pain through evidence-based knowledge and insights into precision assessment and therapeutic behavioral intervention.
“Historically, the concept of cancer-related pain has been used to study chronic pain associated with cancer or cancer treatment. Cancer-related pain refers to persistent pain that continues more than three months after active cancer treatment,” says lead author, Jeanna Qiu, a MD-PhD student at Harvard Medical School. “Conventional research on chronic cancer pain focuses on occurrence and severity of general bodily pain in any body location. This approach has not been able to distinguish different types of pain after cancer treatment, such as lymphatic pain due to fluid accumulation and inflammation, general bodily pain, postmastectomy pain, chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy, or arthralgias related to hormonal treatments.”
Hence, opportunities are missed when it comes to investigating the underlying physiological and psychosocial mechanisms of different types of pain and develop efficacious pain treatments.
To that end, the team provided evidence for the etiology of lymphatic pain, conducted objective and subjective assessment of lymphatic pain, and further offered evidence for the effective behavioral interventions to promote lymph flow and reduce inflammation for lymphatic pain.
According to co-first author Mei Fu, at Dorothy and Dale Thompson Missouri Endowed Professor in Nursing and Associate Dean for Research at University of Missouri-Kansas City School of Nursing and Health Studies, the study provided much needed knowledge regarding precision assessment that enables clinicians to distinguish different types of pain.
“Detailed evidence also underscored the effectiveness of behavioral interventions to promote lymph flow, such as The-Optimal-Lymph-Flow program,” says Fu. “The comprehensive knowledge and evidence in this study can be directly applied to clinical practice to to reduce lymphatic pain in women treated for breast cancer to reduce lymphatic pain.”
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References
DOI
Original Source URL
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.wcn.2024.04.001
Funding information
This review was part of study funded by Oncology Nursing Foundation (2022 ONF RE33) with Mei R Fu as the principal investigator and the National Institute of Health /National Science Foundation /National Cancer Institute (1R01CA214085-01) with Mei R Fu and Yao Wang as the multiple principal investigators. Its contents are solely the responsibility of the authors and do not necessarily represent the official views of the funders. The funders had no role in the preparation of the manuscript and decision to publish.
About Women and Children Nursing
Women and Children Nursing (WCN) is an international, interdisciplinary and peer reviewed journal which aims to provide development, reviews and current knowledge across a broad range of nursing as well as nursng-related public issues, especially for women and children.