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Morphological and functional brain changes in chronic cancer-related pain: A systematic review

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/ar.25113

Keywords

chronic cancer-related pain; fMRI; neuroimaging

Funding

  1. Fonds Wetenschappelijk Onderzoek [G042221N]

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The purpose of this study was to review the literature on brain changes in chronic cancer-related pain patients using neuroimaging techniques. The results showed that there are morphological and functional changes in the brains of patients with chronic cancer-related pain compared to pain-free cancer patients or healthy volunteers. However, there were inconsistencies in findings and variations in methodology and sample size, leading to inconclusive results.
The purpose of this study was to perform a systematic review of the available literature on morphological and functional brain changes measured by modern neuroimaging techniques in patients suffering from chronic cancer-related pain. A systematic search was conducted in PubMed, Embase, and Web of Science using different keyword combinations. In addition, a hand search was performed on the reference lists and several databases to retrieve supplementary primary studies. Eligible articles were assessed for methodological quality and risk of bias and reviewed by two independent researchers. The search yielded only four studies, three of which used MRI and one PET-CT. None of the studies measured longitudinal morphological (i.e., gray or white matter) changes. All studies investigated functional brain changes and found differences in specific brain regions and networks between patients with chronic cancer-related pain and pain-free cancer patients or healthy volunteers. Some of these alterations were found in brain networks that also show changes in non-cancer populations with chronic pain (e.g., the default mode network and salience network). However, specific findings were inconsistent, and there was substantial variation in imaging methodology, analysis, sample size, and study quality. There is a striking lack of research on morphological brain changes in patients with chronic cancer-related pain. Moreover, only a few studies investigated functional brain changes. In the retrieved studies, there is some evidence that alterations occur in brain networks also involved in other chronic non-cancer pain syndromes. However, the low sample sizes of the studies, finding inconsistencies, and methodological heterogeneity do not allow for robust conclusions.

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