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Patients with breast cancer malignant fungating wounds have six specific symptoms caused by wounds: malodor, pain, massive exudate, bleeding, infection, and pruritus. Malignant fungating wounds cause patients' physical condition and social function to be severely restricted, and the cost of wound dressing change further increases financial pressure, which leads to low self-identity, complex and variable emotions, and low quality of life. Therefore, the care of patients with malignant fungating wounds focuses on symptom management with the aim of improving the quality of life. There are scarce well-defined wound symptom management programs for this group, and most focus on wound management while ignoring the impact on the patient's body and mind. This study will construct malignant fungating wounds care regimen for breast cancer patients in order to improve the quality of life.
Full description
Patients with breast cancer malignant fungating wounds have six specific symptoms caused by wounds: malodor, pain, massive exudate, bleeding, infection, and pruritus, and there is an interrelationship between the symptoms. The symptoms presented by patients have certain individual differences and vary with the stage of treatment and treatment effect, which bring different degrees of distress to patients and their families and seriously affect patients' prognosis and quality of life. It is found that wound symptoms such as malodor are significantly negatively correlated with the quality of life of patients with malignant fungating wounds. Malignant fungating wounds cause patients' physical condition and social function to be severely restricted, and the cost of wound dressing change further increases financial pressure, which leads to low self-identity, complex and variable emotions, and low quality of life. With the continuous improvement of cancer treatment level, patients' quality of life is more representative of cure and recovery than survival to some extent. Therefore, the care of patients with malignant fungating wounds focuses on symptom management with the aim of improving the quality of life. There are scarce well-defined wound symptom management programs for this group, and most focus on wound management while ignoring the impact on the patient's body and mind. This study will take the symptom management theory as the guide, start from the actual needs of patients and combine with the actual clinical situation to construct malignant fungating wounds care regimen for breast cancer patients in order to improve the quality of life and make their lives dignified and meaningful.
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Inclusion criteria
Age greater than or equal to 18 years old with pathologically confirmed diagnosis of breast cancer.
Tumor metastasis in the chest wall or other sites and rupture to form a malignant fungating wound with a wound area of at least 10cm2 or more.
Knowing of the cancer diagnosis. ④ Capable and willing to receive follow-up.
Exclusion criteria
Patients with mental illness or cognitive impairment and language expression deficiency.
Patients with extensive metastasis of cancer throughout the body to the chest, shoulders, back, arms, etc. and whose treatment was ineffective.
Patients at the end stage of death.
Withdrawal criteria:
Patients who developed serious complications during the study and were unable to continue the study.
Primary purpose
Allocation
Interventional model
Masking
50 participants in 1 patient group
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Central trial contact
liangzhi Qiu, M.D.
Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov
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