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Mind-Body Interventions for People With Cancer: Evidence, Innovation, and Implementation.

Hanna S W Conradi, Jamie N Petersson, Julie M Deleemans, Haley D M Schuman, Chantal Savard, Elisabeth Irving, Nisha Marshall, Linda E Carlson

Seminars in radiation oncology July 1, 2026 Peer reviewed DOI: 10.1016/j.semradonc.2026.151009 via PubMed

Summary

People with cancer often face ongoing psychological and physical challenges during and after treatment, including anxiety, depression, fatigue, and reduced quality of life. Mind-body interventions, such as mindfulness, yoga, and acupuncture, are increasingly used in cancer care to address these issues. This review evaluates various mind-body practices and their effectiveness in improving biopsychosocial outcomes for adults with cancer, while also highlighting the need for better research methods and broader access to these therapies.

Study at a glance

Design narrative review
Population adults with cancer
Key finding Mind-body interventions can improve biopsychosocial outcomes in adults with cancer.

Abstract

Many people with cancer (PWC) continue to experience persistent biopsychosocial and existential challenges across the cancer care continuum. Symptoms such as anxiety, depression, cancer-related fatigue and pain, sleep disturbance, fear of cancer recurrence, cognitive impairment, and reduced quality of life remain highly prevalent during and after treatment, underscoring the need for interventions that address both psychological and physiological dimensions of distress. Mind-body interventions encompass a diverse group of practices that explicitly target the bidirectional relationship between mental and physical processes and are increasingly incorporated into integrative oncology as adjuncts to standard care. This narrative review synthesizes current evidence on mind-body interventions for improving biopsychosocial outcomes in adult PWC. We review guideline-recommended interventions including mindfulness-based interventions, yoga, tai chi and qigong, relaxation therapies, hypnosis, music therapy, acupuncture, acupressure, massage, reflexology, and aromatherapy; as well as emerging modalities such as psychedelic-assisted therapy, biofield therapies, nature-based interventions, and mindfulness-based approaches for sexual dysfunction. For each intervention, we summarize target symptoms, treatment-phase considerations, and the quality and limitations of the supporting evidence. Finally, we discuss future directions with an emphasis on improving methodological rigor, elucidating mechanisms of action, expanding implementation and access, and extending research across diverse populations and all stages of cancer care, including survivorship and end-of-life contexts.

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