Inpatient Rehabilitation of Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplant Patients: Managing Challenging Impairments and Medical Fragility

Am J Phys Med Rehabil. 2024 Mar 1;103(3S Suppl 1):S46-S51. doi: 10.1097/PHM.0000000000002408.

Abstract

Hematopoietic stem cell transplants play an important role in the treatment of cancer, particularly hematologic malignancies. These patients can encounter functional impairments unique to hematopoietic stem cell transplant, including deconditioning, cancer-related fatigue, steroid myopathy, graft versus host disease, and capillary leak syndrome. Medical fragility and increased risk of infection may make rehabilitation challenging on the acute care and postacute care settings. Patients admitted to acute inpatient rehabilitation experience a high rate of transfer to the primary acute service and high rate of mortality after transfer back. Physical medicine and rehabilitation physicians can use a number of strategies to mitigate these patients' risk of medical complications including evidence-based predictive models to assist with postacute rehabilitation triage, physiatry-led consult-based rehabilitation, and oncology hospitalist comanagement on inpatient rehabilitation.

MeSH terms

  • Graft vs Host Disease*
  • Hematopoietic Stem Cell Transplantation* / adverse effects
  • Hospitalization
  • Humans
  • Inpatients
  • Neoplasms* / rehabilitation