AI Article Synopsis

  • - The management of cancer-related pain is inadequate among healthcare providers, despite guidelines existing to help with this issue, prompting a study on current clinical practices and corrective measures.
  • - A survey conducted among physicians revealed inconsistencies in the diagnosis and treatment of cancer pain, with many not using validated tools and often making decisions based on convenience rather than patient needs.
  • - To improve care, a list of ten recommended actions was created, emphasizing better adherence to guidelines, proper characterization of pain, and the use of evidence-based treatments, alongside a call for improved education for oncologists.

Article Abstract

Background: Despite the prevalence of pain among patients with cancer and the availability of pertinent guidelines, the clinical management of oncological pain is decisively insufficient. To address this issue, we evaluated current trends in clinical practice and subsequently generated a list of ten corrective actions-five things to do and five things not to do-for the diagnosis, management, and monitoring of cancer pain.

Methods: The survey included 18 questions about clinical practice surrounding background pain and breakthrough cancer pain (BTcP). Survey questions were developed by a scientific board of 10 physician experts and communicated via email to an expanded panel of physicians in Italy. Responses were tabulated descriptively for analysis.

Results: Of 51 invited physicians, 32 (63%) provided complete survey responses. The responses revealed several incongruencies with current guideline recommendations: physicians did not always diagnose or monitor pain using diagnostically validated or disease-specific instruments; frequently based clinical decision-making on time availability or convenience; and pharmacological therapy was often inappropriate (eg, prescribing NSAIDs or corticosteroids for BTcP). The list of corrective actions generated by the scientific board favored a guideline-oriented approach that systematically characterizes oncological pain and implements treatment based on pain characteristics (eg, fast-acting transmucosal opioids for BTcP) and evidence-based recommendations.

Conclusion: Oncologists require better education and training about the diagnosis, treatment, and monitoring of oncological pain. Physicians should be aware of current guideline recommendations as well as available pharmacological tools for BTcP.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8256821PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CMAR.S310651DOI Listing

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