Physical Address
304 North Cardinal St.
Dorchester Center, MA 02124
As cancer treatment improves, more patients are living longer with functional limitations, and quality-of-life issues become as important as survival.
Rehabilitation must be patient centered and goal oriented. It requires an interdisciplinary team and the active participation of the patient.
Impairments, activity limitations, and participation restrictions from cancer dramatically affect quality of life but are amenable to rehabilitation efforts.
The focus of rehabilitation varies with the phase of the disease process.
Important impairments include pain, fatigue, cognitive dysfunction, mood disorders, paresis, feeding difficulties, bone and soft tissue involvement, and bladder, bowel, and sexual dysfunction.
Activity limitations can be ameliorated with training in activities of daily living, exercise, and adaptive equipment.
Participation in home, vocational, and recreational activities plays a critical role in quality of life. Economic burdens, environmental barriers, and transportation problems often need to be addressed.
The National Cancer Institute Dictionary of Cancer Terms defines rehabilitation as “a process to restore mental and/or physical abilities lost to injury or disease, in order to function in a normal or near-normal way.” Rehabilitation is critical to improving quality of life (QOL) for cancer survivors and maintaining dignity for persons with terminal illness. Successful rehabilitation requires several components.
First, it must be patient centered —that is, individualized to the patient's needs, desires, and situation. Health care providers must always remember that the patient is the captain of the rehabilitation team. Rehabilitation that fails to respect a patient's wishes will fail altogether. Most problems in rehabilitation occur when there are differences between the team's goals and those of the patient.
Second, rehabilitation must be goal oriented. Goals should be meaningful to the patient's QOL. They must be measurable and concrete so that they are transparent to the patient and the caregivers. Goals also must be achievable. Health care providers must balance realism with hope in counseling patients about their goals.
Third, rehabilitation requires an interdisciplinary team approach. In traditional multidisciplinary medical teams, different health care professionals each individually set goals appropriate to their area of specialization. In interdisciplinary rehabilitation, the team members work toward common goals not only by fulfilling the responsibilities of their particular discipline but also by helping meet the patient's goals as a group. Team members must demonstrate a high degree of communication skills, humility, and commitment.
Last, rehabilitation also requires the active participation of the patient. Rehabilitation is not something done to an individual; it must be done with the individual. Rehabilitation is not a passive process and requires individuals to take responsibility for self-management of their illness. Rehabilitation is largely an educational process for the patient and family members.
The World Health Organization has published an International Classification of Functioning, Disability and Health, which is meant to supplement the International Classification of Diseases and Related Health Problems, 10th edition (ICD-10). It presents a series of definitions that are crucial to understanding the role of rehabilitation in improving QOL. These definitions are listed in Box 48.1 . This chapter focuses on impairments, activity limitations, and participation restrictions in patients with cancer and discusses how rehabilitation can ameliorate these disabilities.
Impairments are problems in body function or structure such as a significant deviation or loss of a body part or organ system.
Activity limitations are difficulties an individual may have in executing activities of daily life.
Participation restrictions are problems an individual may experience in involvement in life situations.
The number of cancer survivors continues to grow because more people are living longer with cancer as a result of new advances in surgical, medical, and radiation oncology. The result is that increasing numbers of patients face more years with cancer-related disability. The Global Burden of Disease Cancer Collaboration has estimated that cancer caused 208.3 disability-adjusted life-years (DALYs) in 2015. Cancer survivors who are older than 55 years have significantly more pain and deficits in self-care and mobility than do control subjects. Focus needs to be directed away from mere survival toward the preservation and improvement of QOL for these survivors. In Japan, for example, the number of breast cancer survivors with lymphedema and pain in the chest wall, axilla, and arm is expected to double by 2020.
Patients with cancer can benefit from rehabilitation at every phase of the disease ( Table 48.1 ). Clinicians should ask the patient the simple question, “Has your ability to function changed?” Because cancer is a complex, chronic illness, management requires vigilance and a comprehensive and preventive approach to illness and disability. The major concerns of persons with cancer include their overall health, fitness, fatigue, emotional and social function, and pain, which may vary during different phases of the disease. For example, in the initial phase, anxiety and disruption of routines may present the greatest challenges. During the treatment phase, fatigue, nausea, and sleep disruption may be the most significant problems. If the patient is having difficulty with mobility, self-care, fatigue, or pain, referral to a cancer rehabilitation program may be appropriate. Guidelines for referral for breast cancer rehabilitation have been published.
Phase | Patient Needs | Symptoms | Impact |
---|---|---|---|
|
Education, fitness | Pain, anxiety, insomnia, debility | Disruption of daily routines |
|
Education, acute care support | Pain, fatigue, ROM, decreased ambulation, ADL support | Daily routines, stamina (psychologic social function) |
|
Education, support, chronic care, healthy lifestyle | Pain, anxiety, depression, reduced mobility, edema, fatigue, neuropathy, insomnia | Work, family, avocation, cosmesis |
|
Education, support | Same as above; metastatic disease effects | Daily routines, work and play |
|
Education, support | Pain, asthenia, depression | Dependence |
Ideally, most patients should be referred in the “prehab” stage, when they have been initially diagnosed. There is a growing body of evidence that shows that an exercise and education program begun before treatment is initiated reduces morbidity and shortens hospital length of stay. Looking at gastroesophageal cancers, Le Roy and colleagues began a multicenter controlled trial in France to evaluate whether a prehabilitation program can decrease morbidity at 30, 60, and 90 days after diagnosis and can increase the percentage of patients who can complete the full recommended regimen of chemotherapy and surgery. A small controlled trial demonstrated that preoperative vestibular training improved postoperative postural function in patients with vestibular schwannoma. Preoperative rehabilitation seems of greatest benefit in those who have the lowest anaerobic thresholds (i.e., have the poorest endurance).
Many patients with complex conditions will benefit from seeing a physiatrist, a physician who specializes in physical medicine and rehabilitation. Physiatrists can assess the etiology of disability. They can guide patients to the appropriate level of rehabilitation care (e.g., inpatient, outpatient, or home) and determine whether precautions are needed. Treatments provided can include prescription of durable medical equipment and orthotics, medications, and injections.
Even when cancer is localized to one organ system, it may cause the loss of bodily function across many organ systems. Delineating these impairments in individuals is the first step toward ameliorating them; this process lies at the core of cancer rehabilitation.
Virtually every patient with cancer experiences pain during the course of the illness, and the pain often can become debilitating. Pain severity correlates closely with function, as demonstrated in one study of 216 Chinese patients with cancer who had metastatic disease. In that study, patients with increasing severity of pain had poorer function, whereas patients with mild, well-controlled pain functioned similarly to persons without pain.
Cancer-related fatigue has been described as “overwhelming and sustained exhaustion and decreased capacity for physical and mental work [that are] not relieved by rest.” In addition, fatigue has been shown to have a negative impact on one's economic, social, and emotional status. It has been demonstrated that improving the quality of sleep is helpful, but increasing the amount of “rest” is not effective in reducing the symptoms of cancer-related fatigue. Exercise has been shown to mitigate fatigue.
In studies of patients with advanced cancer, the incidence of delirium ranges from 20% to 86%. Delirium may be reversible in 50% of cases with proper identification and management. The etiology of delirium in persons with cancer is usually multifactorial. Accurate assessment is critical for effective treatment. Risk factors for the development of delirium in patients before bone marrow transplantation included lower cognitive function, lower physical function, and higher blood urea nitrogen, alkaline phosphatase, and magnesium levels.
Medications play a large role in the development of delirium. In a study of 216 hospitalized patients with cancer, use of corticosteroids, opioids, and benzodiazepines was most frequently associated with delirium. The clinician must also consider metabolic factors. Fever and sepsis often produce acute delirium, and dehydration and uremia frequently contribute to the condition. Hypoxia and hypoglycemia are additional factors that can be easily assessed.
Delirium may manifest as either a hypoactive or a hyperactive state. In hypoactive delirium, dehydration is a frequent contributing factor. Medication adverse effects (especially opioids and corticosteroids) and liver failure are often implicated in hyperactive states.
Patients with cancer often report cognitive difficulties after chemotherapy and other treatment regimens. However, one study indicates no significant differences in the long-term cognitive function of cancer survivors versus control subjects. Many of these reports of cognitive difficulty may relate to fatigue.
Receiving a cancer diagnosis is stressful and frightening for most persons. Initially, they may experience symptoms of shock, disbelief, denial, or despair as they struggle to accept and incorporate the reality of the diagnosis. Patients may also experience a variety of normal fears throughout their treatment course, including fears of disability, loss of societal roles, loss of control, loss of desirability, abandonment, and death. Overall, however, most patients cope successfully with cancer diagnosis and treatment and experience good long-term psychologic adjustment. Many patients even describe positive changes in their lives related to their diagnosis, including positive changes in self-perception, interpersonal relationships, priorities, and goals.
Although most patients cope well, a significant number experience serious mood disorders. Estimates of the prevalence of depression among patients with cancer range from 15% to 25%. Anxiety is quite common and may be related to poorly controlled pain, abnormal metabolic states, or medication-related adverse effects. Patients may also experience posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) in response to cancer diagnosis and treatment. PTSD is an anxiety disorder that develops after an extremely stressful event, such as the development of a life-threatening illness. Within 5 years of diagnosis, between 10% and 15% of cancer survivors may meet the criteria for PTSD.
Become a Clinical Tree membership for Full access and enjoy Unlimited articles
If you are a member. Log in here