Educational interventions for the management of cancer-related fatigue in adults

Nov 25, 2016The Cochrane database of systematic reviews

Educational programs to help adults manage cancer-related tiredness

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Abstract

A meta-analysis of 14 randomized controlled trials involving 2213 participants indicates that educational interventions may slightly reduce cancer-related fatigue.

  • Moderate quality evidence suggests a small reduction in fatigue intensity (SMD -0.28) from educational interventions compared to usual care.
  • Educational interventions showed low quality evidence of a small effect on overall fatigue (SMD -0.27) and a moderate effect on fatigue distress (SMD -0.57).
  • There was a small reduction in fatigue interference with daily life (SMD -0.35) with moderate quality evidence.
  • Low quality evidence indicated a reduction in anxiety (mean difference -1.47) associated with educational interventions.
  • No significant reduction in depressive symptoms was found, and educational interventions did not improve daily living activities or physical function.
  • Pooled evidence from two studies suggested an improvement in global quality of life (MD 11.47), which may be clinically significant.

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Full Text

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