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Acupuncture as Palliative Therapy for Physical Symptoms and Quality of Life for Advanced Cancer Patients
Author(s) -
Elizabeth Dean-Clower,
Anne Doherty-Gilman,
Aparna Keshaviah,
Frank Baker,
Chiewkwei Kaw,
Weidong Lu,
Judith Manola,
Richard T. Penson,
Ursula A. Matulonis,
David S. Rosenthal
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
integrative cancer therapies
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.73
H-Index - 60
eISSN - 1552-695X
pISSN - 1534-7354
DOI - 10.1177/1534735409360666
Subject(s) - medicine , quality of life (healthcare) , physical therapy , acupuncture , brief pain inventory , anxiety , breast cancer , mood , palliative care , depression (economics) , cancer , chronic pain , alternative medicine , psychiatry , nursing , pathology , economics , macroeconomics
Background. Acupuncture is underutilized as an adjunct cancer therapy. The main study objectives were to determine the feasibility of administering acupuncture as palliative therapy to patients with advanced ovarian or breast cancer and to assess the effect on symptoms and quality of life (QOL). Methods. This study was a pilot, single-armed prospective clinical trial for patients with advanced cancer to receive 12 acupuncture sessions over 8 weeks with follow-up at weeks 9 and 12. Ambulatory patients with advanced ovarian or breast cancer were enrolled to receive treatments at an outpatient academic oncology center. Symptom severity was measured before and after each acupuncture session. A composite QOL assessment tool, consisting of validated instruments, was completed at 5 time points. Results. Forty patients enrolled in the study. Twenty-eight patients (70%; 95% confidence interval [CI] = 53%-83%) completed 4 weeks of treatment, and 26 patients (65%; 95% CI = 48%-79%) completed 8 weeks. Eight patients (20%) withdrew before receiving acupuncture, and 6 patients (15%) discontinued treatment early because of disease progression or scheduling demands. Among all 32 assessed patients, there was self-reported improvement immediately post-treatment in anxiety, fatigue, pain, and depression and significant improvement over time for patients with anxiety ( P = .001) and depression ( P = .02). Among patients experiencing baseline symptoms, there was improvement in anxiety ( P = .001), fatigue ( P = .0002), pain ( P = .0002), and depression ( P = .003). QOL measures of pain severity and interference, physical and psychological distress, life satisfaction, and mood states showed improved scores during treatment, with sustained benefit at 12 weeks. Conclusions. This pilot study demonstrates that an 8-week outpatient acupuncture course is feasible for advanced cancer patients and produces a measurable benefit that should be evaluated in controlled trials.

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