A systematic review of the effectiveness of patient-based educational interventions to improve cancer-related pain

  • Wendy H. Oldenmenger*
  • , Jenske I. Geerling
  • , Irina Mostovaya
  • , Kris C. P. Vissers
  • , Alexander de Graeff
  • , Anna K. L. Reyners
  • , Yvette M. van der Linden
  • *Corresponding author for this work

    Research output: Contribution to journalReview articlepeer-review

    98 Citations (Scopus)
    421 Downloads (Pure)

    Abstract

    Background: Despite existing guidelines to assess and manage pain, the management of cancer-related pain is often suboptimal with patients often being undertreated. Inadequate pain management may be due to patient-related barriers. Educating patients may decrease these barriers. However, the effect of pain education on patient-related outcomes is still unclear. This review aimed to study the effect of educational interventions on cancer-related pain.

    Design: We performed a systematic review of randomized controlled trials (RCTs) identified from Medline and Cinahl, from 1995 to May 2017. Two reviewers independently selected trials comparing educational intervention to usual care or an active control intervention. The methodological quality was assessed and data extraction was done independently. Primary outcome measures were pain intensity and interference. Secondary outcome measures were knowledge/barriers, medication adherence and self-efficacy.

    Results: Twenty-six RCTs totaling 4735 patients met our inclusion criteria. Compared to the control group, 31% of the studies (including 19% of all patients) reported a significant difference in pain intensity in favor of the intervention group. Twelve studies measured pain interference and four (30%) found a significant improvement. With regard to secondary endpoints, significant differences in favor of the experimental arms were found for pain knowledge or barriers (15/22 studies; 68%), medication adherence (3/6 studies; 50%) and self-efficacy (1/2 studies).

    Conclusions: Patient-based pain educational programs may result in improvements of relevant patient reported outcomes. However, the interventions are heterogeneous and improvement of pain was only seen in less than one third of the studies and in less than 20% of all included patients. (C) 2017 The Author(s). Published by Elsevier Ltd.

    Original languageEnglish
    Pages (from-to)96-103
    Number of pages8
    JournalCANCER TREATMENT REVIEWS
    Volume63
    DOIs
    Publication statusPublished - Feb-2018

    Keywords

    • Cancer pain
    • Patient education
    • Systematic review
    • Pain intensity
    • Knowledge
    • Pain interference
    • RANDOMIZED CONTROLLED-TRIAL
    • SELF-CARE INTERVENTION
    • CLINICAL-TRIAL
    • REPRESENTATIONAL INTERVENTION
    • ONCOLOGY OUTPATIENTS
    • PATIENTS KNOWLEDGE
    • MANAGEMENT
    • PROGRAM
    • BARRIERS
    • RECOMMENDATIONS

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