Smoking and other health factors in patients with head and neck cancer

BackgroundInformation on smoking and other health factors in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients throughout treatment, follow-up and survivorship is limited. This study explores patterns of multiple health factors during radiotherapy (RT) and naturalistic long-term follow-up in a convenience sample...

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Veröffentlicht in:Cancer epidemiology 2022-08, Vol.79, p.102202-102202, Article 102202
Hauptverfasser: McCarter, Kristen, Baker, Amanda L., Wolfenden, Luke, Wratten, Chris, Bauer, Judith, Beck, Alison K., Forbes, Erin, Carter, Gregory, Leigh, Lucy, Oldmeadow, Christopher, Britton, Ben
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BackgroundInformation on smoking and other health factors in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients throughout treatment, follow-up and survivorship is limited. This study explores patterns of multiple health factors during radiotherapy (RT) and naturalistic long-term follow-up in a convenience sample of patients with HNC.MethodsSmoking, alcohol use and depression were measured at baseline, 4 and 12 weeks post RT for a sub-group of 99 patients who participated in a randomised controlled trial and completed long-term follow-up. These factors plus healthy eating, physical activity and fatigue are also reported from the long-term follow-up component. Smoking was measured by self-report and biochemically, whilst all other variables were by self-report. Where variables were assessed at multiple time points logistic mixed effects regression models determined within-person changes over time.ResultsThere were important discrepancies between self-reported (4–7%) and biochemically verified (13–29%) rates of smoking. Rates of smoking and hazardous alcohol intake were significantly increased at follow-up compared to baseline. Depression rates were observed to be higher at end of RT compared to baseline. At long-term follow-up, fatigue was common and co-occurred with suboptimal healthy eating and hazardous alcohol use.ConclusionClinically important levels of smoking and alcohol consumption post RT in this sample suggest possible targets for intervention beyond treatment into long-term follow-up of patients.
ISSN:1877-7821
1877-783X
DOI:10.1016/j.canep.2022.102202