Lymphedema management in patients with head and neck cancer: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials on physical therapy interventions
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Cruz‑Fernández, Laura de la; Galiano Castillo, Noelia; Galván Banqueri, Mercedes; Castro Martín, Eduardo; Lozano Lozano, Mario; López Garzón, María de la CabezaEditorial
Springer Nature
Materia
Head and neck neoplasms Intermittent pneumatic compression devices Lymphedema
Fecha
2025-04-26Referencia bibliográfica
de-la-Cruz-Fernández, L., Galiano-Castillo, N., Galván-Banqueri, P. et al. Lymphedema management in patients with head and neck cancer: a systematic review of randomized controlled trials on physical therapy interventions. Support Care Cancer 33, 420 (2025). [https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-025-09438-1]
Patrocinador
Funding for open access publishing: Universidad de Granada/ CBUA; Consejería de Salud, Junta de Andalucía (PI- 0187–2021); European Regional Development Fund (ERDF-FEDER)Resumen
Purpose Lymphedema is one of the most common side effects following oncological treatment. This systematic review
analyzed the latest literature concerning the efficacy of physical therapy interventions in treating secondary lymphedema
in patients with head and neck cancer.
Methods Medline, Web of Science, Scopus, and Cochrane Library were searched for studies published before August 2023.
Randomized controlled trials in which physical therapy was applied to treat lymphedema in head and neck cancer were
included. Reviewers blinded screened the articles retrieved, scored methodological quality, and extracted data. The review
was conducted according to the PRISMA statement and registered in PROSPERO (CRD42023439643). Risk of bias assessment
was performed using the Cochrane tools.
Results A total of four randomized controlled trials were included. They comprise 167 patients, and only one of the studies
achieved a low risk of bias. Interventions were kinesio taping, compression therapy, manual lymphatic drainage and/
or exercise applied in combination with skin care and self-management. Some adverse effects related to intervention were
mild and transitory.
Conclusion The findings shown by this review were that an exercise program plus manual lymphatic drainage supplemented
with kinesio taping or compression therapy could be beneficial for external lymphedema. Neither therapy achieved an
improvement in internal lymphedema.