Which integrative therapies help and which don’t
The ASCO panel weighed in on a number of therapies; letter grades reflected the amount of scientific evidence and efficacy.
Grade A and B recommendations reflected a “high certainty” that the net benefits were either substantial (A) or moderate (B) and advised oncologists to offer the therapy. Grade C therapies should be “selectively offered” to individual patients based on professional judgment and patient preferences; Grade D therapies were found to offer no net benefit and were discouraged. Grade H therapies were found to be likely harmful and also discouraged and Grade I showed insufficient evidence for any kind of recommendation either way.
How did the various therapies rank?
- Meditation, music therapy, yoga and group stress management programs were all recommended for reducing anxiety, while acupuncture, massage and relaxation could be “selectively offered” to individual patients.
- Acupressure, electro-acupuncture, ginger and relaxation could also be “selectively offered” to individual patients along with anti-emetic drugs for nausea and vomiting during chemo. Use of the supplement glutamine was discouraged, though, due to lack of an effect.
- Meditation (particularly mindfulness-based stress reduction), relaxation, yoga, massage and music therapy were all recommended for treating depression and mood disturbance while acupuncture, healing touch, and stress management could be “selectively offered” to individual patients.
- Hypnosis, ginseng, acupuncture and yoga could be “selectively offered” to individual patients to help with treatment-related fatigue, but ASCO advised patients to seek guidance from their health care team before using ginseng or any dietary supplement. Some ginseng has estrogenic properties, which could harm certain breast cancer patients. ASCO also discouraged the use of Acetyl-L-carnitine and guarana for fatigue.
- Low-level laser therapy, manual lymphatic drainage and compression bandaging, ASCO found, could be “selectively offered” to individual patients for lymphedema.
- Acupuncture, healing touch, hypnosis and music therapy could also be selectively offered to individual patients for managing pain.
- Meditation and yoga were recommended for improving quality of life; acupuncture, mistletoe, qigong, reflexology, and stress management could be considered and “selectively offered.” ASCO warned, however, that mistletoe use should only be subcutaneous, since ingestion of high doses of mistletoe berry or leaf can cause serious adverse reactions.
Read the full guidelines here.
Serving patients, not skeptics
Lyman and Greenlee both acknowledged some cancer care providers may be skeptical of the benefits of integrative oncology, but they said clinical practice guidelines were still important because cancer patients are using the therapies, with or without their doctor’s blessing.
“These questions come up with almost every cancer patient,” said Lyman, a breast cancer oncologist of nearly 30 years. “It’s very important for doctors to know what the patient is taking or doing beyond conventional medicine. Open dialogue and discussion is critical. We need to direct and guide patients and their doctors.”
Oncologists who scoff at these therapies, he said, should still respect their patients’ requests, record the use of any integrative therapy in their charts and encourage them to share results, particularly if they experience side effects.
“Doctors need to support and partner with their patients,” he said. “You cannot blame patients for wanting to lessen side effects that we can’t completely control medically.”
Greenlee pointed to the rigor with which the guidelines were written and reviewed. The ASCO panel further critically reviewed and updated the evidence supporting the recommendations presented in the current guideline endorsement.
“We looked at all of this with a critical eye,” she said. “We have a very high bar and followed a very rigorous process with both the SIO and ASCO to evaluate these therapies. There were many different disciplinary eyes vetting them.”
Naysayers tend to lump anything alternative into one big bucket, she said, while ASCO and SIO are trying to tease these therapies apart to determine which ones work and which ones don’t.
“We’re reporting on therapies that have clear biological mechanisms, where we have clinical trials showing whether they are effective or not, and whether they are safe,” she said. “We need to conduct more trials and we need to publish more guidelines. We need to get the information out there for patients and clinicians to use.”