Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Credits and acknowledgements
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Cancer Symptom Mechanisms and Models: Clinical and Basic Science
- 4 The clinical science of cancer pain assessment and management
- 5 Pain: basic science
- 5a Mechanisms of disease-related pain in cancer: insights from the study of bone tumors
- 5b The physiology of neuropathic pain
- 6 Cognitive dysfunction: is chemobrain real?
- 7 Cognitive impairment: basic science
- 8 Depression in cancer: pathophysiology at the mind-body interface
- 9 Depressive illness: basic science
- 9a Animal models of depressive illness and sickness behavior
- 9b From inflammation to sickness and depression: the cytokine connection
- 10 Cancer-related fatigue: clinical science
- 11 Developing translational animal models of cancer-related fatigue
- 12 Cancer anorexia/weight loss syndrome: clinical science
- 13 Appetite loss/cachexia: basic science
- 14 Sleep and its disorders: clinical science
- 15 Sleep and its disorders: basic science
- 16 Proteins and symptoms
- 17 Genetic approaches to treating and preventing symptoms in patients with cancer
- 18 Functional imaging of symptoms
- 19 High-dose therapy and posttransplantation symptom burden: striking a balance
- Section 3 Clinical Perspectives In Symptom Management and Research
- Section 4 Symptom Measurement
- Section 5 Government and Industry Perspectives
- Section 6 Conclusion
- Index
- Plate section
- References
5a - Mechanisms of disease-related pain in cancer: insights from the study of bone tumors
from Section 2 - Cancer Symptom Mechanisms and Models: Clinical and Basic Science
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 August 2011
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Contributors
- Foreword
- Credits and acknowledgements
- Section 1 Introduction
- Section 2 Cancer Symptom Mechanisms and Models: Clinical and Basic Science
- 4 The clinical science of cancer pain assessment and management
- 5 Pain: basic science
- 5a Mechanisms of disease-related pain in cancer: insights from the study of bone tumors
- 5b The physiology of neuropathic pain
- 6 Cognitive dysfunction: is chemobrain real?
- 7 Cognitive impairment: basic science
- 8 Depression in cancer: pathophysiology at the mind-body interface
- 9 Depressive illness: basic science
- 9a Animal models of depressive illness and sickness behavior
- 9b From inflammation to sickness and depression: the cytokine connection
- 10 Cancer-related fatigue: clinical science
- 11 Developing translational animal models of cancer-related fatigue
- 12 Cancer anorexia/weight loss syndrome: clinical science
- 13 Appetite loss/cachexia: basic science
- 14 Sleep and its disorders: clinical science
- 15 Sleep and its disorders: basic science
- 16 Proteins and symptoms
- 17 Genetic approaches to treating and preventing symptoms in patients with cancer
- 18 Functional imaging of symptoms
- 19 High-dose therapy and posttransplantation symptom burden: striking a balance
- Section 3 Clinical Perspectives In Symptom Management and Research
- Section 4 Symptom Measurement
- Section 5 Government and Industry Perspectives
- Section 6 Conclusion
- Index
- Plate section
- References
Summary
More than 10 million people are diagnosed with cancer (other than skin cancer) every year, and this number is expected to increase to 15 million per year by 2020. In 2005, cancer caused 7.6 million deaths worldwide. Cancer is a major health problem in the United States: 25% of US mortalities are related to cancer, making it the second leading cause of death.
Despite the increasing prevalence of cancer, improvements in the detection and treatment of most types of cancers have resulted in significantly increased survival rates. Pain is the first sign of cancer for many patients, most of whom will experience moderate to severe pain during the course of their disease and even into survivorship. Cancer-associated pain can be present at any time during the course of the disease, but the frequency and intensity of cancer pain tends to increase as the disease progresses, such that 62% to 86% of patients with advanced-stage cancer experience significant amounts of cancer-induced pain. If cancer patients and survivors, given their increasing life spans, are to remain functional, integrated, and contributing members of society, novel mechanism-based therapies will need to be developed to reduce cancer-related pain.
Cancer pain may arise from different processes: by direct tumor infiltration or involvement, as a result of diagnostic or therapeutic surgical procedures (eg, biopsies, resection), or as a side effect or toxicity related to therapies used to treat cancer (eg, chemotherapy, radiation therapy).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Cancer Symptom ScienceMeasurement, Mechanisms, and Management, pp. 32 - 40Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010