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Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review

BACKGROUND: Patients who have completed initial cancer treatment (cancer survivors) have been relatively neglected. We need data to help us better understand the needs of this group and to underpin evidence-based service development. METHODS: Scoping reviews of research published in the last two dec...

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Autores principales: Richardson, A, Addington-Hall, J, Amir, Z, Foster, C, Stark, D, Armes, J, Brearley, S G, Hodges, L, Hook, J, Jarrett, N, Stamataki, Z, Scott, I, Walker, J, Ziegler, L, Sharpe, M
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Nature Publishing Group 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251948/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22048036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2011.425
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author Richardson, A
Addington-Hall, J
Amir, Z
Foster, C
Stark, D
Armes, J
Brearley, S G
Hodges, L
Hook, J
Jarrett, N
Stamataki, Z
Scott, I
Walker, J
Ziegler, L
Sharpe, M
author_facet Richardson, A
Addington-Hall, J
Amir, Z
Foster, C
Stark, D
Armes, J
Brearley, S G
Hodges, L
Hook, J
Jarrett, N
Stamataki, Z
Scott, I
Walker, J
Ziegler, L
Sharpe, M
author_sort Richardson, A
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Patients who have completed initial cancer treatment (cancer survivors) have been relatively neglected. We need data to help us better understand the needs of this group and to underpin evidence-based service development. METHODS: Scoping reviews of research published in the last two decades focussing on the problems faced by cancer survivors, and the effectiveness of interventions for these problems were undertaken. The aim was to identify what we know, what we do not know and opportunities where research could provide new information. We searched for, retrieved and rapidly appraised systematic reviews sourced from the most common electronic databases supplemented by more recently published individual studies. RESULTS: The research evidence is surprisingly limited. We have some knowledge of the prevalence and nature of depression, pain and fatigue in cancer survivors. We know much less about cognitive and physical impairment, employment, financial well-being and relationships. Even where we have evidence, it is mostly of only moderate quality, is most often only for breast cancer and focuses almost exclusively on the early phase of survivorship. We have good evidence for the effectiveness of drug treatments for pain and moderate evidence for fatigue and depression, but not for other symptoms. Interventions based on rehabilitative and self-management approaches remain in the early stages of evaluation. INTERPRETATION: There has been a substantial amount of research describing many of the problems experienced by the cancer survivors. This is strongest in the area of symptoms in the period soon after treatment. However, the quality of the evidence is often poor, and some topics have been little examined. We urgently need data on the natural evolution and scale of the problems of cancer survivors obtained from well-designed, large-scale cohort studies and the robust testing of interventions in clinical trials. Given the current financially constrained research funding environment, we suggest areas in which strategic investment might give findings that have the potential to make a major impact on patient well-being in a 5-year time scale.
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spelling pubmed-32519482012-01-05 Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review Richardson, A Addington-Hall, J Amir, Z Foster, C Stark, D Armes, J Brearley, S G Hodges, L Hook, J Jarrett, N Stamataki, Z Scott, I Walker, J Ziegler, L Sharpe, M Br J Cancer Full Paper BACKGROUND: Patients who have completed initial cancer treatment (cancer survivors) have been relatively neglected. We need data to help us better understand the needs of this group and to underpin evidence-based service development. METHODS: Scoping reviews of research published in the last two decades focussing on the problems faced by cancer survivors, and the effectiveness of interventions for these problems were undertaken. The aim was to identify what we know, what we do not know and opportunities where research could provide new information. We searched for, retrieved and rapidly appraised systematic reviews sourced from the most common electronic databases supplemented by more recently published individual studies. RESULTS: The research evidence is surprisingly limited. We have some knowledge of the prevalence and nature of depression, pain and fatigue in cancer survivors. We know much less about cognitive and physical impairment, employment, financial well-being and relationships. Even where we have evidence, it is mostly of only moderate quality, is most often only for breast cancer and focuses almost exclusively on the early phase of survivorship. We have good evidence for the effectiveness of drug treatments for pain and moderate evidence for fatigue and depression, but not for other symptoms. Interventions based on rehabilitative and self-management approaches remain in the early stages of evaluation. INTERPRETATION: There has been a substantial amount of research describing many of the problems experienced by the cancer survivors. This is strongest in the area of symptoms in the period soon after treatment. However, the quality of the evidence is often poor, and some topics have been little examined. We urgently need data on the natural evolution and scale of the problems of cancer survivors obtained from well-designed, large-scale cohort studies and the robust testing of interventions in clinical trials. Given the current financially constrained research funding environment, we suggest areas in which strategic investment might give findings that have the potential to make a major impact on patient well-being in a 5-year time scale. Nature Publishing Group 2011-11-08 2011-11-03 /pmc/articles/PMC3251948/ /pubmed/22048036 http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2011.425 Text en Copyright © 2011 Cancer Research UK https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-Share Alike 3.0 Unported License. To view a copy of this license, visit http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-sa/3.0/
spellingShingle Full Paper
Richardson, A
Addington-Hall, J
Amir, Z
Foster, C
Stark, D
Armes, J
Brearley, S G
Hodges, L
Hook, J
Jarrett, N
Stamataki, Z
Scott, I
Walker, J
Ziegler, L
Sharpe, M
Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title_full Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title_fullStr Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title_full_unstemmed Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title_short Knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
title_sort knowledge, ignorance and priorities for research in key areas of cancer survivorship: findings from a scoping review
topic Full Paper
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3251948/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22048036
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/bjc.2011.425
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