Islamabad, Jan 17 : Surviving cancer may also mean
surviving pain, according to a study by the University of Michigan Health System
showing 20 percent of cancer survivors at least two years post diagnosis have
current cancer-related chronic pain.
The study, published in the American
Cancer Society's journal Cancer, gives new insight on issues in cancer
survivorship among the growing number of U.S. cancer survivors.
More than
40 percent of patients surveyed had experienced pain since their diagnosis, and
the pain experience was worse for blacks and women.
The Lance Armstrong
Foundation, an organization that examines experiences of the cancer community,
sponsored the U-M survey study of nearly 200 patients.
The most
significant source of pain was cancer surgery (53.8 percent) for whites and
cancer treatment (46.2 percent) for blacks.
Women had increased pain, more
pain flares, more disability due to pain, and were more depressed than men
because of pain.
Blacks with pain reported higher pain severity, expressed
more concern about harmful pain treatment side effects, and had greater
pain-related disability.
According to the National Cancer Institute,
more than 60 percent of people diagnosed with cancer will be alive in five
years. As society ages, study authors say, pain complaints and cancer issues
will grow as significant health concerns and health policy issues.
"All
in all, the high prevalence of cancer and pain and now chronic cancer pain among
these survivors, especially blacks and women, shows there's more work to be done
in improving the quality of care and research," says lead study author and pain
medicine specialist Carmen R. Green, M.D., professor of anesthesiology,
obstetrics and gynecology and health management and policy at the University of
Michigan.
Patient and physician knowledge and attitudes may lead to poor
pain management, authors say. For instance, worries about side effects such as
addiction or fears that pain is a sign that the cancer had gotten worse may lead
patients and their doctors to minimize pain complaints.
"When necessary
and appropriate there are a variety of therapies available to address pain and
improve their well-being," Green says.
Ends
SA/EN
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Cancer survivors likely to experience pain at some point in care
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