Prevalence of pain in patients with breast cancer post-treatment: A systematic review

To evaluate the prevalence and severity of persistent pain after breast cancer treatment (PPBCT) in patients who received surgery, radiotherapy or a combination of treatments and to explore how different treatments and techniques impact pain. Medline, Embase and Cochrane Central databases were searc...

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Veröffentlicht in:Breast (Edinburgh) 2018-12, Vol.42, p.113-127
Hauptverfasser: Wang, Katie, Yee, Caitlin, Tam, Samantha, Drost, Leah, Chan, Stephanie, Zaki, Pearl, Rico, Victoria, Ariello, Krista, Dasios, Mark, Lam, Henry, DeAngelis, Carlo, Chow, Edward
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container_end_page 127
container_issue
container_start_page 113
container_title Breast (Edinburgh)
container_volume 42
creator Wang, Katie
Yee, Caitlin
Tam, Samantha
Drost, Leah
Chan, Stephanie
Zaki, Pearl
Rico, Victoria
Ariello, Krista
Dasios, Mark
Lam, Henry
DeAngelis, Carlo
Chow, Edward
description To evaluate the prevalence and severity of persistent pain after breast cancer treatment (PPBCT) in patients who received surgery, radiotherapy or a combination of treatments and to explore how different treatments and techniques impact pain. Medline, Embase and Cochrane Central databases were searched for articles which evaluated the prevalence of PPBCT. Search results were limited to studies addressing chronic post-surgical pain (CPSP), persistent post-surgical pain (PPSP), post-mastectomy pain syndrome (PMPS) or radiotherapy (RT) related pain in breast cancer patients and published in the English language. The primary outcome was the incidence or severity of PPBCT. Descriptive analyses were performed. A total of 177 studies were included in this review. Overall, pain prevalence was 29.8% amongst 3746 patients (Group 1: 30 studies) post-surgery, 27.3% post-RT (Group 2: 41 studies, n = 15 019), and 21.8% amongst BC survivors who reported on the general prevalence of after receiving various combinations of BC treatment (Group 3: 106 studies, n = 135 437). PPBCT remains to be a prevalent and complex clinical issue, despite a variety of different techniques and treatments. Various factors such as varying definitions of pain, inconsistent use of assessment tools and differences in methodology between studies may contribute to discrepancies in reports of PPBCT. A greater understanding of BC treatments and their impact on PPBCT may help identify potential risk factors, prevention and pain management strategies. •Pooled pain prevalence post-surgery was 29.8%.•Pooled pain prevalence post-RT was 27.3%.•General PPBCT prevalence was 21.8% amongst BC survivors.•PPBCT remains to be a prevalent and complex clinical issue.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.breast.2018.08.105
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subjects Breast cancer
Oncology
Pain
Pain management
Radiotherapy
Surgery
title Prevalence of pain in patients with breast cancer post-treatment: A systematic review
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