The effects of age on health-related quality of life in cancer populations: A pooled analysis of randomized controlled trials using the European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) QLQ-C30 involving 6024 cancer patients

Abstract Background Cancer incidence increases exponentially with advancing age, cancer patients live longer than in the past, and many new treatments focus on stabilizing disease and HRQOL. The objective of this study is to examine how cancer affects patients' HRQOL and whether their HRQOL is...

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Veröffentlicht in:European journal of cancer (1990) 2015-12, Vol.51 (18), p.2808-2819
Hauptverfasser: Quinten, Chantal, Coens, Corneel, Ghislain, Irina, Zikos, Efstathios, Sprangers, Mirjam A.G, Ringash, Jolie, Martinelli, Francesca, Ediebah, Divine E, Maringwa, John, Reeve, Bryce B, Greimel, Eva, King, Madeleine T, Bjordal, Kristin, Flechtner, Hans-Henning, Schmucker-Von Koch, Joseph, Taphoorn, Martin J.B, Weis, Joachim, Wildiers, Hans, Velikova, Galina, Bottomley, Andrew
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Abstract Background Cancer incidence increases exponentially with advancing age, cancer patients live longer than in the past, and many new treatments focus on stabilizing disease and HRQOL. The objective of this study is to examine how cancer affects patients' HRQOL and whether their HRQOL is age-dependent. Methods Data from 25 EORTC randomized controlled trials was pooled. EORTC QLQ-C30 mean scores for the cancer cohort and five general population cohorts were compared to assess the impact of cancer on patients' HRQOL. Within the cancer cohort, multiple linear regressions (two-sided level P-value = 0.05 adjusted for multiple testing.) were used to investigate the association between age and HRQOL, adjusted for gender, WHO performance status (PS), distant metastasis and stratified by cancer site. A difference of 10 points on the 0–100 scale was considered clinically important. Results Cancer patients generally have worse HRQOL compared to the general population, but the specific HRQOL domains impaired vary with age. When comparing the cancer versus the general population, young cancer patients had worse financial problems, social and role functioning, while the older cancer groups had more appetite loss. Within the cancer cohort, HRQOL was worse with increasing age for physical functioning and constipation, and better with increasing age for social functioning, insomnia and financial problems (all p 
ISSN:0959-8049
1879-0852
1879-0852
DOI:10.1016/j.ejca.2015.08.027