NurseJet
Back to Discover
Systematic ReviewResearch

In a network meta-analysis, massage ranked best among non-drug therapies for cancer-related fatigue

International Journal of Nursing Studies (PubMed)Dec 1, 2024

AI-summarized from the linked source. Educational brief, not medical advice.

Brief summary

A network meta-analysis found that massage therapy ranked highest among non-pharmacological therapies for reducing cancer-related fatigue, though the certainty was low.

What NurseJet pulled from the source

Pooling 49 trials, 24 methods, and 3,887 patients, the analysis ranked massage therapy as having the most significant advantage over conventional nursing care and other non-drug therapies, followed by two moxibustion techniques; strengthening exercise ranked lowest. The authors stress that the small number of trials per therapy limits certainty.

Why this matters for nurses

Cancer-related fatigue is one of the most common and distressing symptoms patients report, and it sits squarely within nursing's symptom-management role. This may matter for nurses because it signals that simple, low-risk measures such as massage may help, while reminding the team the evidence is not strong enough to set one fixed protocol.

Bedside takeaway

Worth knowing that massage ranked highest among non-drug options for cancer-related fatigue in this network meta-analysis, though the evidence is too uncertain to call any one therapy best.

Explain this for my unit

Key takeaways

  • The network meta-analysis pooled 49 trials, 24 methods, and 3,887 patients.
  • Massage therapy ranked highest for reducing cancer-related fatigue.
  • Strengthening exercise ranked lowest in this particular analysis.
  • The authors call for larger, higher-quality trials before adopting one approach as best.

Practice implications

  • Assess cancer-related fatigue routinely as a symptom rather than treating it as unavoidable, offer low-risk comfort measures such as massage where appropriate and consistent with the care plan, and avoid presenting any one therapy as proven best given the wide uncertainty.

Limitations & cautions

  • Few trials supported each individual therapy, and much of the evidence base used culturally specific modalities, limiting generalizability. The rankings signal promise, not certainty, and do not establish a single recommended program.
  • AI-summarized from the linked source. Review the original article before applying to practice.

Citations

Exact source links

Public citations are filtered to exact credible source pages. Homepage-only or invalid links stay in admin review and are not shown here.

International Journal of Nursing Studies (PubMed)

International Journal of Nursing Studies (PubMed). The effectiveness of different non-pharmacological therapies on cancer-related fatigue in cancer patients:A network meta-analysis.

Open original source

https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/39305683/

Professional education only

This summary does not replace clinical judgment, facility policy, provider orders, or official guidelines. Verify practice changes against the original source and local protocol.

Related briefs

More updates for this clinical area

Back to Discover

Oncology Research and Treatment (PubMed)

In a single-center prospective study of 72 head and neck cancer patients receiving concurrent chemoradiotherapy, adding honey and cryotherapy to routine care delayed the onset of radiation-induced oral mucositis and lowered the incidence of moderate-to-severe cases compared with routine nursing care alone.

OncologyAI summaryReview source

Clinical Journal of Oncology Nursing (PubMed)

A new joint ONS/ASCO guideline standardizes how to manage chemotherapy extravasation, covering antidotes, thermal compresses, and when to refer for surgery.

OncologyAI summaryReview source