Cancer rehabilitation and Fatigue CBM Flashcards

1
Q

What is Cancer Rehabilitation?

A
  • Helping a person with cancer to reach maximum physical, social, psychological and vocational functioning within limits of disease and treatment.
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2
Q

What are the goals of rehabilitation?

A
  1. Preventative rehab.
    1. pre-op education
    2. eg how to maintain strength and ROM in arm after breast surgery
  2. Restorative care
    1. return person with minimal functional impairments to pre morbid state
  3. Supportive care
    1. reduce functional difficulties and compensate for permanent deficits.
  4. Palliative treatment
    1. maintain functional capacity and mobility for a period of time
    2. Conserve energy, assist devices, body mechanics
    3. symptom management
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3
Q

What roles do team members play in rehab?

A
  • Nurse
    • triage, screening, assessment, follow up, navigation of hospital system, arranging home care
    • teaches strategies for managing symptoms
  • Physiotherapist
    • evaluates strength, moblity, endurance, joint ROM
    • exercises (transfers, gait, stairs)
  • Occupational therapist
    • self care, leisure activities, chores, physical and social environment
    • cognition
    • CHAMPS score weekly
    • energy conservation
    • goal setting, counselling
    • cognitive retraining
    • communication with community agencies
    • joint/bone protection
    • neuropathy management
    • scar management
  • Dietitian
    • nutritional status
    • weight/BMI
    • screening tools
    • Supplements
  • Social worker
    • psychosocial needs of cancer patients
    • financial / legal needs
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4
Q

What is cancer related fatigue? Asthenia

A
  • distressing, persistent subjective sense of tiredness or exhaustion related to cancer or tretaments that is not proprotional with recent activity
  • Interferes with function
  • general fatigue, physical fatigue, emotional fatigue, mental fatigue
  • not relieved by rest
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5
Q

Contributors to Fatigue

A
  • Cancer
  • Treatment (chemo, RT, surgery). Can persist for months or years beyond treatment
  • Nutrition
  • Symptoms
  • Activities
  • Emotions
  • Poor sleep
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6
Q

Changes associated with fatigue

A
  • decreased cognitive function
  • decreased muscle endurance
  • decreased sleep quality
  • decreased control over body processes
  • increased social withdrawal
  • increased emotional reactivity
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7
Q

What is the pathophysiology of cancer related fatigue?

A
  • Pain
  • Symptoms of energy imbalance (anorexia-cachexia, linfection, paraneoplastic syndromes, metabolics disorders)
    • anemia
    • chronic inflammatory state
    • cytokines
  • treatment
  • Chronic stress
    • HPA axis –> increased cortisol levels.
    • fatigue
    • depressio
  • Neuroendocrine dysfunction
    • interferon alpha –> severe fatigue
    • hypothyroidism –> fatigue
  • Cardiac or pulmonary dysfunction
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8
Q

Assessment of fatigue

A
  • National Comprehensive Cancer Network rating scale
  • FACT-F scale
  • Multidimensional Fatigue INventory MFI
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9
Q

Mangement of CRF

A
  • multidimensional treatment
  • nutritional counselling
  • exercise
  • ergonomic advice
  • correction of hormonal and metabolic abnormalities
  • pharmacological
  • energy conservation
  • sleep therapy
  • stress reduction
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10
Q

Exercise and CRF

A
  • best evidence for effectiveness
  • counteracts negative effects of tumour and therapy
  • improved cardiovascular, pulmonary and muscular functioning
  • imrpoved 02 consumption, stroke volume, cardiac output, vascularization, lymphatic circulation, muscle tone, strength, coordinationg, balance, metabolic rate
  • sedentary behaviour = deconditioning, poor symptom control and poorer clinical outcome
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11
Q

Guidelines for exercise program?

A
  • evaluate for peripheral neuropathies and MSK morbidities
  • fracture risk evaluation (hormonal therapies, metastatic bone disease)
  • known cardiac condition (treatment related or not) need risk assessment

ACSM (America College of Sports Medicine) guidelines for cancer survivors:

150 min / week of moderate exercise OR

75 minutes / week of vigorous exercise

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12
Q

Pharmacological treatment for CRF

A
  • review drugs that cause fatigue (BB, benzos, antihistamines, opioids, barbituates)
  • Erythropoeitin
    • anemia related to chemotherapy ONLY
  • Transfusion Hg< 70-80
    • chemotherapy
  • SSRI for depression -related fatigue
    • paroxetine 20 mg od
    • double blind placebo study - no improvement in fatigue
  • Methylphenidate
    • CRF, depression, somnolence, cognition
  • Modafinil
    • narcolepsy, shift work sleep disorder, OSA
    • DBPCT in chemo patients, oral modafinil benefitted severe fatigue
  • Steroids
    • duration 4-6 weeks only
    • Short term only, antiinflammatory effect
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13
Q

List components of an interprofessional cancer nutrition and rehab program

A
  • Nursing interventions
  • Patient passport
  • caregiver support
  • medication teaching and followup
  • regular symptom evaluation
  • dietary interventions
    • nutritional advice, food related discomfort, mealtime routines
  • psychosocial interventions
    • individual therapy
    • couples therapy
  • legal and financial support
  • group interventions
  • physiotherpay
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14
Q

Group interventions for CFR

A
  • what is Cancer rehab?
  • recognizing CRF
  • managing anxiety
  • complementary therapies and activities that heal
  • nutrition
  • exercise and cancer
  • life after cancer
  • massage therapy
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15
Q

Physiotherapy for rehab

A
  • aim to relieve fatigue
  • supervised exercise 2x/week for 30-45 min
  • cardiovascular on bicycle and treadmill
  • strengthening, stretching, ROM
  • balance exercises
  • patient education re: walking aids
  • patient/caregiver support
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16
Q

Future areas of research in Cancer rehab and fatigue

A
  • causes of anorexia-cachexia
  • importance of exercise in improving survival and QOL
  • fatigue in different cancer treatment types
  • role that fatigue plays in long term cancer survivor’s well being
  • need to track return to work and societal roles
  • coping
  • long term impact of cancer on functioning of caregivers
  • new pharmcologic treatments
  • role of chronic inflammatory state in fatigue