A Scoping Review on Nursing Interventions for Pain and Sleep Management in Cancer Patients Receiving Immunotherapy: Revealing Critical Gaps in Sleep Disturbance Assessment

Read the full article

Discuss this preprint

Start a discussion What are Sciety discussions?

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Immunotherapy has transformed cancer management. Patients receiving immune checkpoint inhibitors frequently experience concurrent pain and sleep disturbances that affect quality of life, treatment adherence, and overall survival. Nursing interventions addressing both symptoms remain poorly defined. This scoping review searched the Scopus, ScienceDirect, PubMed, and CINAHL for updates from 2019 to 2025 following PRISMA-ScR guidelines; ten studies were included (randomized controlled trials, systematic reviews, and observational studies for all cancers since focusing on melanoma alone would not give enough results. Nurse-led interventions included education, physical therapies (massage, reflexology, acupressure), behavioral approaches, and digital platforms (telehealth, electronic patient-reported outcomes). The patients achieved moderate short-term pain reductions, significantly improved quality of life, enhanced treatment adherence, and reduced emergency department visits by up to 45%. However, only 2/10 studies used validated instruments to measure sleep quality, and none designed primary interventions specifically targeting sleep disturbances in patients receiving immunotherapy. Long-term sustainability of pain interventions was questionable, with most effects attenuating beyond eight weeks except for psycho-educational approaches. Future research should develop integrated, nurse-delivered interventions addressing pain and sleep as interconnected symptoms, with extended follow-up periods and enhanced accessibility across diverse healthcare settings. Validated instruments to measure sleep quality should be employed.

Article activity feed