Abstract:
Individuals with cancer
have multiple symptoms, which frequently co-occur. A
nonrandom distribution of symptoms suggests a common mechanism.
Symptom clusters (SCs) were considered part of various syndromes
in the early years of medicine. The SC concept in clinical
medicine is old. Symptom clusters were commonly described in
the psychology/psychiatry and neurology literature. Symptom cluster
may be defined either clinically or statistically. Statistically derived
clusters can differ from clinically defined clusters. The
clinical importance of statistically derived clusters is unclear.
Pain-insomnia-fatigue and pain-depression-fatigue are commonly
recognized clinical clusters. Nausea-vomiting and anxiety-depression
are also statistically observed clusters.
The longitudinal
stability of clusters is unknown. Certain SCs, appear to have
a greater adverse influence on outcomes (such as performance
status and survival) than others. Comorbidities probably
influence symptoms at different levels, but their effect on cancer clusters is
unknown. Comprehensive symptom assessment is crucial to cluster
identification. The potential use of the cluster concept to abbreviate
symptom assessment tools needs validation. Symptom cluster
can be disease and/or treatment related and may change as
individuals undergo antitumor therapies. Polypharmacy in symptom
management is frequent but could be minimized if 1 drug could
be used to treat cluster symptoms. Symptom cluster appears to
vary with the assessment tool, disease stage, symptom domain used
to cluster, cluster methodology, and number of symptoms assessed.
The validity and reliability of SCs need universally accepted
statistical methods, assessment tools, and symptom domains.
For now, nausea-vomiting is recognized as a consistent cluster
across multiple studies. Pain-depression-fatigue and pain-insomnia-fatigue
are also well recognized. Symptom clusters may help in cancer diagnosis,
symptom management, and prognostication. However, the cluster
method, reliability, and validity need to be established
before assessment or treatment guidelines are established.
Symptom clusters require further research before becoming
part of routine medical symptom assessment and management.
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