2015
DOI: 10.3322/caac.21268
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Screening, evaluation, and management of cancer‐related fatigue: Ready for implementation to practice?

Abstract: Answer questions and earn CME/CNE Evidence regarding cancer-related fatigue (fatigue) has accumulated sufficiently such that recommendations for screening, evaluation, and/or management have been released recently by 4 leading cancer organizations. These evidence-based fatigue recommendations are available for clinicians, and some have patient versions; but barriers at the patient, clinician, and system levels hinder dissemination and implementation into practice. The underlying biologic mechanisms for this de… Show more

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Cited by 146 publications
(143 citation statements)
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References 306 publications
(457 reference statements)
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“…Consistent with findings that fatigue is highly prevalent during and after cancer treatment [37] and that associations exist between fatigue and sleep disturbance [33,38], higher levels of both morning and evening fatigue were associated with both initial levels (i.e., morning and evening fatigue) and trajectories (i.e., morning fatigue) of sleep disturbance. Recent findings suggest that morning and evening fatigue are distinct but related symptoms that warrant separate assessments in oncology patients [7].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…Consistent with findings that fatigue is highly prevalent during and after cancer treatment [37] and that associations exist between fatigue and sleep disturbance [33,38], higher levels of both morning and evening fatigue were associated with both initial levels (i.e., morning and evening fatigue) and trajectories (i.e., morning fatigue) of sleep disturbance. Recent findings suggest that morning and evening fatigue are distinct but related symptoms that warrant separate assessments in oncology patients [7].…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 86%
“…During chemotherapy (CTX), over 45% of patients experience clinically meaningful levels of fatigue that decrease their ability to tolerate treatments, engage in social relationships, and maintain regular work activities [1]. However, a growing body of evidence demonstrates that inter-individual variability exists in fatigue severity across cancer diagnosis [24] and treatments [5, 6].…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…28 Risk factors for fatigue following cancer treatment can include anemia, comorbidities, concurrent symptoms, impaired sleep quality, mood disturbance, cachexia, sarcopenia, deconditioning and treatment with medications with sedating side effects. 29 Evidence also links fatigue with gene polymorphisms, circadian rhythm disruption, immune dysregulation, abnormal cortisol secretion and/or proinflammatory cytokine activity. 30,31 Other models emphasize imbalanced energy intake, metabolism and expenditure, 32,33 or propose dysregulation in the function of immune-neuroendocrine-based regulatory systems.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%