Infographic with pictograms and captions: "no or little motivation; lack of concentration; inability to make decisions; short-term memory".

Fatigue in can­cer: Just be tired?

Many peo­ple are famil­iar with the symp­toms of exhaus­tion. How­ev­er, exhaus­tion that occurs in con­nec­tion with ill­ness­es is referred to as fatigue. It can be long-last­ing and even chron­ic, and many peo­ple suf­fer from it. The caus­es range from sleep dis­or­ders, stress and defi­cien­cies to a num­ber of dif­fer­ent dis­eases such as cancer.

The term “fatigue” comes from the French lan­guage and lit­er­al­ly means “tired­ness” or “exhaus­tion”. In addi­tion, fatigue syn­drome is a com­mon symp­tom in the pop­u­la­tion and in med­ical prac­tice. It occurs in dif­fer­ent clin­i­cal pic­tures and can be very pro­nounced. Some­times so strong that patients feel seri­ous­ly ill. Fatigue can have many caus­es. A spe­cif­ic cause can­not be iden­ti­fied. There­fore, the syn­drome is not easy to explain and under­stand. Fatigue asso­ci­at­ed with chron­ic dis­ease often improves with treat­ment of the dis­ease itself.

Fre­quen­cy and Symptoms

The dis­ease occurs world­wide and has a preva­lence of 0.2 — 0.4%, i.e. the pro­por­tion of peo­ple with the dis­ease in the total pop­u­la­tion. Accord­ing to con­sen­sus esti­mates, almost half a mil­lion peo­ple in Ger­many suf­fer from Chron­ic Fatigue Syn­drome, or CFS for short. Doc­tors often speak of myal­gic encephalomyelitis (ME). ME/CFS can lead to sig­nif­i­cant lim­i­ta­tions in every­day life. The World Health Orga­ni­za­tion (WHO) clas­si­fied ME/CFS as a ner­vous sys­tem dis­ease in 1969. In the ICD (Inter­na­tion­al Clas­si­fi­ca­tion of Dis­eases) it is cod­ed under G93.3 as a neu­ro­log­i­cal disease.

Those affect­ed often suf­fer from severe phys­i­cal weak­ness, fatigue and lack of strength for years. There are also symp­toms such as headaches and joint pain or cog­ni­tive impair­ments. For the major­i­ty of those affect­ed, who are usu­al­ly diag­nosed at a young age between 20 and 40, CFS often means the abrupt end of their pro­fes­sion­al and/or social life. Many of those affect­ed become unable to work, and some even require care. The qual­i­ty of life of patients with CFS is often worse than that of advanced can­cer patients. So what does it look like when fatigue appears par­al­lel to a tumor disease.

Tumor-Asso­ci­at­ed Fatigue

An often lead­en “fatigue” that impairs both phys­i­cal and men­tal per­for­mance and can­not be explained by lack of sleep or heavy stress: This is fatigue that also dif­fers from “nor­mal” tired­ness (lack of sleep) or exhaus­tion (due to severe load) dif­fers. Fatigue is one of the most com­mon and dis­tress­ing symp­toms of can­cer that patients have to strug­gle with. Most can­cer patients return to their orig­i­nal ener­gy lev­els with­in a year of com­plet­ing tumor treat­ment. How­ev­er, more recent stud­ies show that around 30% of patients con­tin­ue to suf­fer from severe fatigue and the life restric­tions it caus­es, even sev­er­al years after treatment.

Since the caus­es of fatigue are mul­ti­fac­to­r­i­al, COVID-19 dis­ease can also be asso­ci­at­ed with the syn­drome. CFS can devel­op after var­i­ous seri­ous viral infec­tions, such as the flu or COVID-19. Infec­tion can be the trig­ger, espe­cial­ly if you have can­cer. A not insignif­i­cant pro­por­tion of our patients show the full pic­ture of a CFS. Unfor­tu­nate­ly, it is still not exact­ly known why about a third of patients devel­op this chron­ic fatigue. How­ev­er, there are var­i­ous ther­a­py mod­ules that can be used to improve the symp­toms of fatigue. The gru­el­ing state of exhaus­tion often improves again after a few weeks or months.

Fatigue man­age­ment in can­cer — What hap­pens in the consultation?

When you come to a fatigue con­sul­ta­tion, the sus­pi­cion has arisen in advance through dis­cus­sions and ques­tion­naires that chron­ic tumor-asso­ci­at­ed fatigue exists. Per­haps you have been feel­ing less pro­duc­tive for a long time, often exhaust­ed and weak, and you have not been able to regain your old ener­gy lev­el even after the end of the tumor ther­a­py. In the fol­low­ing sec­tion you will learn how a typ­i­cal fatigue con­sul­ta­tion works.

Dur­ing the con­sul­ta­tion, your cur­rent (fatigue) symp­toms will first be dis­cussed togeth­er, and the course of the dis­ease as well as rein­forc­ing and reliev­ing fac­tors or ther­a­pies will be analysed. Your med­ical his­to­ry and the diag­nos­tics that have already been car­ried out will be assessed. In par­tic­u­lar, to be able to rule out addi­tion­al fac­tors such as hypo­func­tion of the thy­roid gland, ane­mia and the like or to be able to treat them cor­rect­ly. If a mod­ule is still miss­ing in the diag­nos­tics, it can be added if nec­es­sary. In the next step, your treat­ing doc­tor would like to dis­cuss with you how you assess your fatigue and offer you fur­ther infor­ma­tion on chron­ic tumor fatigue in gen­er­al and pos­si­ble ther­a­py strate­gies. This results in an indi­vid­ual ther­a­py plan, which is made up of var­i­ous com­po­nents (e.g. sport, relax­ation meth­ods, med­ica­tion, nutri­tion). Unfor­tu­nate­ly, fatigue can­not be cured direct­ly at the moment, only the symp­toms can be treat­ed, cir­cu­la­to­ry prob­lems, pain, severe sleep dis­or­ders, defi­cien­cies such as vit­a­min D defi­cien­cy, folic acid or sele­ni­um defi­cien­cy. It is also very impor­tant to avoid overex­er­tion, which repeat­ed­ly leads to severe flare-ups, and to learn relax­ation tech­niques, for exam­ple through breath­ing exer­cis­es. That’s eas­i­er said than done, because it’s main­ly young peo­ple who want to work or have to look after chil­dren who are affect­ed. But an impor­tant ther­a­peu­tic prin­ci­ple at the begin­ning is that you first bring in peace.

Over a longer peri­od of time (e.g. 1 year), you will receive a fatigue ques­tion­naire about your course every three months in order to be able to assess the effec­tive­ness of the ther­a­pies. After six and twelve months, you will come back to the fatigue con­sul­ta­tion for an inter­view. There, the attend­ing physi­cians would like to know how you are doing with regard to fatigue, which ther­a­py mod­ules have worked well or in which points we should change or adapt the therapy.

10 facts about fatigue in cancer

  1. Fatigue is a com­mon symp­tom dur­ing and even many years after a tumor disease
  2. Fatigue is more than “sim­ple tiredness”
  3. There are many caus­es of fatigue
  4. Care­ful med­ical his­to­ry is important
  5. Fatigue is often the symp­tom that affects peo­ple the most in every­day life
  6. Ther­a­py is based on sev­er­al pil­lars of symp­tom relief
  7. The ther­a­py plan depends on the indi­vid­ual symp­toms and the respec­tive sit­u­a­tion of the patient
  8. Ther­a­py should be adjust­ed over time
  9. The cause of (tumour-relat­ed) fatigue is not yet well under­stood scientifically
  10. It’s often eas­i­er togeth­er — self-help groups, ther­a­py groups, coop­er­a­tion between therapists

Sources

gesundheitsinformation.de

Fatigue Cen­ter at the Char­ité
https://cfc.charite.de/

Fatigue Cen­ter at the Munich Clin­ic r.d. Isar
https://www.mri.tum.de/chronische-fatigue-centrum-fuer-junge-menschen-mcfc

Guide­line “Long-/Post-COVID-Syn­drome“
https://www.awmf.org/uploads/tx_szleitlinien/020–027p_S1_Post_COVID_Long_COVID_2021-12.pdf

Health City Berlin
https://www.gesundheitsstadt-berlin.de/

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