Hökkä, M., Kaakinen, P., & Pölkki, T. (2014). A systematic review: Non-pharmacological interventions in treating pain in patients with advanced cancer. Journal of Advanced Nursing, 70, 1954–1969.
PHASE OF CARE: End of life care
APPLICATIONS: Palliative care
Interventions included massage or aromatherapy massage (five studies), physical therapy and massage (one study), transcutaneous electrical nerve stimulation (TENS, one study), acupuncture (one study), reflexology (one study), warm water footbath (one study), biofeedback-assisted relaxation (one study), and varied strategies of relaxation and imagery with nature sounds (one study). The effectiveness of massage was mixed, TENS had the potential to reduce pain on movement, acupuncture reduced pain immediately after the intervention but the benefit was transient, reflexology showed no effect, relaxation with biofeedback was beneficial, and psychoeducational and behavior strategies had only a short-term effect. Most studies were found to have a relatively high risk of bias.
There was insufficient evidence to draw firm conclusions about the effectiveness of nonpharmacologic interventions to reduce pain among patients with advanced cancer.
Treating pain is a high priority among patients with advanced cancer receiving palliative care. The effectiveness of many nonpharmacologic interventions is unclear and warrants additional well-designed research. Most of the evidence involved studies in inpatient settings. Additional research among outpatients and those receiving palliative care in the home is needed. Nonpharmacologic interventions are generally low-risk. The identification of approaches than can facilitate reductions in pain would be beneficial for patients with cancer-related pain.