Litcius/Paper detail

“It Is So Easy For Them to Dismiss”: A Phenomenological Study of Cancer Survivors With Chronic Cancer-Related Pain

Katie Fitzgerald Jones, Mei R. Fu, Lisa Wood Magee, Jessica S. Merlin, Devon K. Check, Melissa McTernan, Rachelle Bernacki, Hailey W. Bulls

2023Journal of Palliative Medicine14 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Background:For many cancer survivors post-cure, chronic pain is a devastating complication of cancer treatment. The prevalence of chronic pain among cancer survivors is double that of the general population. However, little is known about the pain experience of cancer survivors who may have a different perspective than people with advanced cancer or people with noncancer pain. Methods:We used a qualitative design with a descriptive phenomenological method to conduct in-depth interviews of 13 cancer survivors residing in the United States who completed curative cancer therapy, were at least three months from treatment, and experienced pain attributable to cancer. Data collection was focused on the lived experience and management of chronic cancer-related pain and a deep understanding of how the experience of chronic cancer-related pain shapes pain management choices. Results:The participants had a variety of primary cancer types and cancer pain syndromes. Three essential themes epitomized the experience of living with chronic cancer-related pain: invisible suffering at the cost of survival, an opioid paradox, and a lack of answers on what to expect and what might help. Conclusion and Implications:The results highlight an opportunity for pain self-management, education, and psychosocial interventions to optimize pain in cancer. Participants' experiences identify several opportunities to improve chronic cancer-related pain. Future efforts should prioritize access to multimodal pain treatments, high-quality communication, and expand clinicians' knowledge and skills to manage chronic pain.

Topics & Concepts

MedicinePsychosocialChronic painCancer painCancerPsychological interventionQuality of life (healthcare)Physical therapyQualitative researchPain medicinePsychiatryNursingInternal medicineAnesthesiologySocial scienceSociologyPain Management and Opioid UseCancer survivorship and carePalliative Care and End-of-Life Issues