Pain, fatigue, and associated gene expressions over chemotherapy in patients with colorectal cancer
Weizi Wu, Aolan Li, Vijender Singh, Andrew Salner, Ming-Hui Chen, Michelle P. Judge, Xiaomei Cong, Wanli Xu, Keun-Yeong Jeong, Keun-Yeong Jeong, Keun-Yeong Jeong

TL;DR
This study explores how pain and fatigue change during chemotherapy in colorectal cancer patients and links these symptoms to gene expression patterns.
Contribution
The study identifies specific gene expression changes associated with pain and fatigue during chemotherapy in colorectal cancer patients.
Findings
Fatigue levels significantly worsened post-chemotherapy and after recovery.
Upregulation of LILRA6 and downregulation of CACNG6 and PRSS33 were associated with increased pain and fatigue.
Inflammatory response and myeloid cell development pathways were critically involved.
Abstract
Patients with colorectal cancer undergoing chemotherapy often experience significant pain and fatigue. Limitations in understanding the complex phenotypes and biological mechanisms of these symptoms hinder effective interventions. This study aimed to identify the pain and fatigue patterns during one chemotherapy cycle and associated gene expression profiles. In a prospective longitudinal study, 34 patients with colorectal cancer from a major cancer center in the Northeastern US were recruited. Self-reported outcome measures of pain and fatigue and blood samples were collected at baseline, post-chemotherapy, and at the end of the chemotherapy cycle. RNA sequencing followed by differential expression analysis identified changes in gene expression. Linear mixed models examined associations between symptoms and possible biomarkers over time. The sample had a mean age of 58.4 years old,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer survivorship and care · Childhood Cancer Survivors' Quality of Life · Cancer-related cognitive impairment studies
