Electronic ISSN 2287-0237

VOLUME

SYMPTOM EXPERIENCES AND MANAGEMENT OF PATIENTS WITH HEAD AND NECK CANCER RECEIVING RADIATION THERAPY: INTEGRATED REVIEW

SEPTEMBER 2018 - VOL.14 | REVIEWS ARTICLE

Head and neck cancer is the 6th most prevalent type of cancer with an annual incident rate of around 600,000 new cases worldwide.1 Head and neck cancer (HNC) includes oral, laryngeal, oropharyngeal, salivary gland and other pharynx cancers.1 Standard treatment of head and neck cancer involves radiation therapy at any time point of the treatment trajectory either for palliative or curative purposes.2 To date, a multidisciplinary approach uses a combination of surgery, radiotherapy, and chemotherapy in order to treat HNC. The frequencies and severity of treatment-related symptoms occur depending on the dose of radiation but worsen when combined with the side effects of chemotherapy.3-5

A review of studies relating to radiation therapy suggested that altered fractionation radiotherapy was associated with an improvement in overall survival rates in patients with oral and oropharyngeal cancers (Hazard Ratio (HR) of mortality = 0.86, 95% CI = 0.76 to 0.98).6 A review of chemotherapy treatment suggested that chemotherapy, in addition to radiotherapy and surgery, was associated with improved overall survival in patients with oral cavity and oropharyngeal cancers (HR of mortality = 0.84; 95% CI = 0.72 to 0.98, p = 0.03).7 However, neither review could find sufficient evidence as to which regimen was associated with better overall survival rates.

There are a number of common symptoms both local and systemic that are sometimes experienced by head and neck cancer patients receiving chemo-radiation treatment, such as fatigue, skin irritation, decreased appetite, sore throat/mouth, changes in saliva, dryness of mouth, alterations of taste, and difficulty swallowing. The severity and frequencies of these symptoms generally increase over the course of treatment and typically peak during the last few weeks of treatment.8

There is a limited number of literature reviews on symptom experience and self-management of head and neck cancer patients with radiation therapy, in the period before, during, and after treatment. Moreover, a qualitative approach to explore these specific experiences and management will benefit both healthcare providers and researchers to understand the experiences patients are faced with. Knowledge of this kind is needed to help eliminate distress from treatment-related symptom toxicities and to help the development of new adequate interventions to support these patients’ needs.

The purpose of this article was to conduct an integrative review to identify the symptoms experienced and to establish how to manage these symptoms for head and neck cancer patients undergoing radiation therapy with the findings of qualitative research.

Search strategy

A literature search was carried out in April 2017 using Cochrane, CINAHL, Ovid, Pubmed, PsycINFO, and Science- Direct databases to review the literature on HNC patient symptom experiences and their management during concurrent chemoradiotherapy. The search terms used were ‘head and neck cancer’ and ‘symptom management’, &lring a challenging process. Communication and collaboration between patients, family, and healthcare teams were also perceived to be important.

A competent and knowledgeable healthcare provider

A competent and knowledgeable healthcare provider supports patients both with verbal and written tailored information. Appropriate management should include specialists such as a psychologist and nutritionist in the multi-disciplinary team.18,21 Symptoms experience leads the patients to seek information and guidance from doctors and nurses, therefore, the information given along with an effective response to patients’ needs is crucial to improve symptom status outcome and well-being, both physically and psychologically.14,21

Interpersonal relationship

Interpersonal relationships were predominantly facilitated by the social resourcefulness of close family and friends, using the experiences of others who had undergone similar treatments at the same time to positively reappraise their own situations. Family is very important for patients including sharing family meals, travel plans, spending time with family members, and emphasizing positive thinking. Some patients relied on family support networks to attend appointments.15,20,21 Strategies to help individuals such as social support and openness with friends were used, as well as approaches to getting air.19 Drawing on experiences of others was helpful as well as meeting the experts at the same time to positively reappraise their own situations and to gain more information and practical advice to move forward.14,19,21 The nurse-patient relationship can help patients to select the appropriate approach to provide comfort from pain; the importance of good manners and understanding with appropriate support can instill confidence which subsequently encouraged the patients to engage with the treatment plan.18

Self-management

Individual patients coped with symptoms in many positive ways such as active planning, trial and error, positive focus, regular exercise, meditation, religious beliefs, and distraction strategies.14,15,17 The patients essentially become their own primary caregivers and manage their symptoms themselves on a day to day basis.17 The key element that links patient, family, and the health care team is communication around occurring symptoms, managing side effects, and monitoring the symptoms.18 The outcomes of symptom management strategies are to ease the severity of physical symptoms and also to reduce the emotional side effects that occur before, during, and after treatment.

Communication strategies with tailored information

Information was received from experts and professional healthcare providers.19 The information needs for patients are particularly of importance during the acute phase, when patients have to plan for active treatment, and during long-term or late phases once they have finished treatment and have to take care of themselves at home.21 Communication is the means to convey appropriate information after having conducted an information needs assessment.17,18 The right information delivered to the right patients by the right person is the key to ensure that patients receive the information they need. Appropriate and effective education can help to eliminate uncertainty and symptom distress (both physical and emotional) and as a consequence improve their health status outcome.19

This qualitative evidence synthesis can provide a context to develop insights from the nine primary research studies. Data extracted from a cross studies comparison with an existing nursing model which is often referred to in cancer patients was based on the Symptom Management Theory (SMT) from UCSF School of Nursing. The three essential concepts of SMT include symptom experience, symptom management strategies, and symptom status outcomes. Symptom experience is a simultaneous perception, evaluation, and response to the change in how an individual is feeling, either in frequency or severity. Symptom management strategies are efforts to eliminate the symptom experience in several ways to reduce the frequency, minimize the severity, and relieve the distress of symptoms. Symptom status outcomes are clear and measurable outcomes to assess after symptom management strategies have been implemented.22,23 As a theoretical framework guideline was applied to consider the trustworthiness of information found in the nine research articles, it was found that symptom management in head and neck cancer patients (HNC) receiving radiation or chemoradiotherapy does not occur in isolation. Symptom experience of patients lead them to seek management strategies through self-management, health care providers, family and friends to reduce severity and to relieve symptom distress. There is an urgent need to help the patient to manage symptoms as well as getting through this difficult time. Recently, more knowledge is emerging about the symptom cluster effect occurring in these fields, especially in cancer-related symptoms.24 We have to focus on multiple symptoms occurring in an individual, and not only consider a single symptom.25,26 HNC patients receiving a combination of both radiation therapy (RT) and combined modality treatment (CMT) have impacted both quality of life (QOL) and outcome status.3,4,27 The effectiveness of interventions to manage symptoms still needs best practice for individual patients who live with uncertainty, disruption of daily life and needed support for their physical and psychological wellbeing. 6,7,10,17,21,28

The three main themes identified in this research synthesis have been meaningful in focusing on symptom experience and management of head and neck cancer patients receiving active treatments. A range of experiences across the treatment trajectory from start, during, and after treatment have been explored. Management strategies used by patients, family, and health care professionals to support and manage the side effects have a multi-dimensional approach. The role of information in terms of collaboration and participation can increase the interpersonal relationship to build trust and gain new knowledge.29,30

Efforts to improve intervention

Symptom self-management strategies are an effort to delay or minimize symptoms experienced. These strategies can be effective in reducing the frequency, minimizing the severity, and relieving the distress of symptoms. Cancer treatment tends to be given to the patient as an out-patient, so increasing attention is being given to self-management strategies used by patients. Early assessment to detect the symptom severity or interference can reduce or delay onset by developing a tailored intervention to a single or a cluster of symptoms. An attempt to improve symptom management and psychosocial care in head and neck cancer patients used a psychosocial program following a mix-methods design. This was used to test the feasibility of a tailored telephone-based stress management intervention, and it was found that the intervention helped to buffer the negative emotional and physical impacts and higher satisfaction was reported by participants in the control group.31 The most significant dose-limiting acute toxicity during radiation or chemoradiotherapy is radiation-induced mucositis and is associated with functional consequences in the short and long term. There are currently no approved strategies or interventions to prevent this symptom. The current recommendation followed by NCCN guidelines suggested excellent oral hygiene with rinsing with saline, sodium bicarbonate, and water.32 Weekly symptom monitoring by skilled and trained professional nurses has been found to reduce hospitalization rates and to increase adherence of head and neck cancer patients during radiation therapy.30 Information provided online to help patients increase knowledge and improve patient compliance in prostate cancer prior to radiation therapy was found to be highly satisfactory in terms of education strategies.33

The diagnosis of head and neck cancer, particularly when treated with a combination of complex treatments, can cause complications in symptoms which are toxic to both patients and their families. Symptom experience in patients with head and neck cancer receiving radiation or chemoradiotherapy treatment were both physical and emotional, with suffering before, during, and after active treatments. Symptom management strategies should be concerned with the multi-dimensions of everyday living. An effective management with patients participating in the decision-making process of their own treatment plan can encourage patient learning to perform self-management and to contribute towards a better experience during the treatment period. An effective intervention in terms of patient preference and physical and emotional comfort will be most valuable in term of expected outcomes. Healthcare providers should create strategies to manage symptoms with a holistic approach.

Early assessment of any symptom cluster before, during, and after treatment is mandatory for clinical oncology nursing, especially in head and neck cancer patients. To understand patients’ experiences with treatment-related symptoms, qualitative research helps to explore subjective feelings from individual feedback. Symptom management strategies consist of a multi-dimensional approach to deal with symptoms that have occurred, drawing from knowledge and understanding of the phenomenon in question. It is important to highlight the importance of holistic care, to encompass not only the physical but also the psychological and emotional aspects of symptom experience. Competent and knowledgeable nurses should be concerned with and be trained to gain new knowledge and the nursing curriculum should include management strategies. Further research in the field of managing symptom clusters should be conducted, especially in complex and advanced treatment scenarios. Furthermore, technology should accompany the latest developments to improve the effectiveness of a multidisciplinary approach and improve sustainability by increasing self-management strategies to aim for optimal health status and treatment outcomes.

Table 1: Symptom Experiences and Management of Patients with Head and Neck Cancer Receiving Radiation Therapy