Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.

<h4>Purpose</h4>Radiotherapy imposes a significant physiological and psychological burden on gynaecological cancer patients. Prehabilitation is being increasingly used to prepare individuals for cancer treatment and improve their well-being and resilience. Whilst prehabilitation has demo...

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Main Authors: Elizabeth McGladrigan, Elizabeth Wrench, Ewan Dean, Aneurin O'Neil, Lisa Ashmore, Christopher Gaffney
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2025-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0319518
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author Elizabeth McGladrigan
Elizabeth Wrench
Ewan Dean
Aneurin O'Neil
Lisa Ashmore
Christopher Gaffney
author_facet Elizabeth McGladrigan
Elizabeth Wrench
Ewan Dean
Aneurin O'Neil
Lisa Ashmore
Christopher Gaffney
author_sort Elizabeth McGladrigan
collection DOAJ
description <h4>Purpose</h4>Radiotherapy imposes a significant physiological and psychological burden on gynaecological cancer patients. Prehabilitation is being increasingly used to prepare individuals for cancer treatment and improve their well-being and resilience. Whilst prehabilitation has demonstrated benefit for individuals undergoing cancer surgery, the structure, role and implementation of prehabilitation prior to radiotherapy are poorly defined and relatively unexplored. This scoping review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the current literature regarding prehabilitation interventions for individuals with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy.<h4>Methods</h4>This review was conducted following the gold-standard Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines for scoping reviews. Literature searches were completed in October 2024 across: the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database; British Nursing Index; Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; Cochrane library (Controlled trials and systematic reviews); Embase; Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; and the Psychological Information Database. Grey literature searches were conducted via Google Scholar, Overton.io, and Trip Pro Medical Database.<h4>Results</h4>Ninety records met the inclusion criteria, pertaining to 56 studies. Cervical cancer was the most represented gynaecological cancer type across studies. A small number of multimodal prehabilitation studies were identified (n = 4). Studies evaluating unimodal interventions were more common, with nutritional interventions (n = 24) being the most frequent, followed by psychological (n = 22) and physical exercise (n = 6) interventions. There was considerable variation across studies in respect to intervention initiation, duration, delivery and outcome measures.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The physiological and psychological impacts of cancer diagnosis and treatment are closely entwined. Further development of multimodal prehabilitation to cohesively address these is an important area for future research. Studies evaluating exercise interventions are relatively unexplored in this patient population and the potential barriers to engagement must be considered. Future research should focus on complete and transparent reporting of interventions, with input from those with lived experience, and adopting a standardised set of outcome measures reported across all trials.
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spelling doaj-art-0690c0b0300942b0bf49a69e2c98e02c2025-08-20T02:33:15ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032025-01-01203e031951810.1371/journal.pone.0319518Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.Elizabeth McGladriganElizabeth WrenchEwan DeanAneurin O'NeilLisa AshmoreChristopher Gaffney<h4>Purpose</h4>Radiotherapy imposes a significant physiological and psychological burden on gynaecological cancer patients. Prehabilitation is being increasingly used to prepare individuals for cancer treatment and improve their well-being and resilience. Whilst prehabilitation has demonstrated benefit for individuals undergoing cancer surgery, the structure, role and implementation of prehabilitation prior to radiotherapy are poorly defined and relatively unexplored. This scoping review aims to provide a comprehensive overview of the current literature regarding prehabilitation interventions for individuals with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy.<h4>Methods</h4>This review was conducted following the gold-standard Joanna Briggs Institute guidelines for scoping reviews. Literature searches were completed in October 2024 across: the Allied and Complementary Medicine Database; British Nursing Index; Cumulative Index to Nursing and Allied Health Literature; Cochrane library (Controlled trials and systematic reviews); Embase; Medical Literature Analysis and Retrieval System Online; and the Psychological Information Database. Grey literature searches were conducted via Google Scholar, Overton.io, and Trip Pro Medical Database.<h4>Results</h4>Ninety records met the inclusion criteria, pertaining to 56 studies. Cervical cancer was the most represented gynaecological cancer type across studies. A small number of multimodal prehabilitation studies were identified (n = 4). Studies evaluating unimodal interventions were more common, with nutritional interventions (n = 24) being the most frequent, followed by psychological (n = 22) and physical exercise (n = 6) interventions. There was considerable variation across studies in respect to intervention initiation, duration, delivery and outcome measures.<h4>Conclusions</h4>The physiological and psychological impacts of cancer diagnosis and treatment are closely entwined. Further development of multimodal prehabilitation to cohesively address these is an important area for future research. Studies evaluating exercise interventions are relatively unexplored in this patient population and the potential barriers to engagement must be considered. Future research should focus on complete and transparent reporting of interventions, with input from those with lived experience, and adopting a standardised set of outcome measures reported across all trials.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0319518
spellingShingle Elizabeth McGladrigan
Elizabeth Wrench
Ewan Dean
Aneurin O'Neil
Lisa Ashmore
Christopher Gaffney
Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
PLoS ONE
title Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
title_full Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
title_fullStr Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
title_full_unstemmed Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
title_short Exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy: A scoping review.
title_sort exploring prehabilitation interventions for patients with gynaecological cancer undergoing radiotherapy a scoping review
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0319518
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