Psychosocial factors associated with impact of cancer in longterm haematological cancer survivors

Summary To assess the impact of cancer (IOC) on subsequent quality of life (QOL), 718 long‐term haematological cancer survivors completed validated psychosocial, functional and QOL scales, including IOC. Fifteen percent reported significant psychological distress, 18% high levels of fatigue and 10%...

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Veröffentlicht in:British journal of haematology 2014-03, Vol.164 (6), p.790-803
Hauptverfasser: Korszun, Ania, Sarker, Shah‐Jalal, Chowdhury, Kashfia, Clark, Charlotte, Greaves, Paul, Johnson, Rachel, Kingston, Judith, Levitt, Gill, Matthews, Janet, White, Peter, Lister, Andrew, Gribben, John
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Summary To assess the impact of cancer (IOC) on subsequent quality of life (QOL), 718 long‐term haematological cancer survivors completed validated psychosocial, functional and QOL scales, including IOC. Fifteen percent reported significant psychological distress, 18% high levels of fatigue and 10% moderate to severe functional impairment. These groups of participants also showed poorer QOL. There were no significant differences in psychological distress (P = 0·76), fatigue (P = 0·23) or functional impairment (P = 0·74) across different cancer subtypes. Two separate hierarchical regression analyses examined the combined association of disease‐type, psychosocial and other factors on negative and positive IOC scores respectively. Higher negative IOC scores were significantly associated (P ≤ 0·001) with medical comorbidity, psychological distress, lower social support, high fatigue levels and functional impairment. Paediatric patients (diagnosed at
ISSN:0007-1048
1365-2141
DOI:10.1111/bjh.12698