Abstract

Background and Objective: Pain is a highly prevalent and distressing experience of hospitalized patients with cancer, and undertreatment is a challenging issue. Adding nonpharmacologic treatments such as acupuncture to conventional pain management may help address a patient's total pain experience. A dearth of acupuncture treatment guidelines exists, leaving individual practitioners to develop treatments themselves. The aim of the work described in this report was to develop a standardized clinical reference manual for East Asian Medicine (EAM) assessment, diagnosis, and acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Design: The acupuncture manual was developed based on: (1) a narrative review of existing literature on acupuncture and cancer pain; (2) a review of acupuncture charting notes of more than 200 treatments provided in an inpatient setting; and (3) meetings of an expert panel of senior acupuncturists to reach consensus on a manual protocol. Results: The resulting manual described diagnosis of patients based on EAM constitution, symptoms and signs, and channel location of the cancer-related pain symptoms. The resulting point selections for acupuncture treatment enables adaptability, reproducibility, and individualized acupuncture treatment of cancer-related pain in hospitalized patients with cancer. Conclusions: The manual fills a vital gap in the current literature, and supports community- and hospital-based acupuncturists as a standardized clinical reference. The manual provides guidance for cancer-related pain management, using EAM acupuncture in hospitalized patients.

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