The association between cancer-related fatigue and diabetes from pre-chemotherapy to 6 months post-chemotherapy
Purpose To quantify the relationship between diabetes and fatigue from pre-chemotherapy to 6 months post-chemotherapy for women with breast cancer compared to women without a history of cancer (controls). Methods This was a secondary analysis from a nationwide prospective longitudinal study of fem...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Supportive care in cancer 2022-09, Vol.30 (9), p.7655-7663 |
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Purpose
To quantify the relationship between diabetes and fatigue from pre-chemotherapy to 6 months post-chemotherapy for women with breast cancer compared to women without a history of cancer (controls).
Methods
This was a secondary analysis from a nationwide prospective longitudinal study of female patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy and controls. Diabetes diagnosis (yes/no) was obtained at baseline, and cancer-related fatigue was measured using the Multidimensional Fatigue Symptom Inventory (MFSI) pre-, post-, and 6 months post-chemotherapy in patients; controls were assessed at equivalent time points. Repeated measures mixed effects models estimated the association between fatigue and diabetes controlling for cancer (yes/no), body mass index, exercise and smoking habits, baseline anxiety and depressive symptoms, menopausal status, marital status, race, and education.
Results
Among 439 patients and 235 controls (52.8 ± 10.5 years old), diabetes was twice as prevalent among patients as controls (11.6% vs. 6.8%). At baseline, diabetes was associated with worse fatigue (4.1 ± 1.7 points,
p
= 0.017). Also, diabetes was associated with clinically meaningful worse fatigue throughout the study period among all participants (5.2 ± 1.9 points,
p
= 0.008) and patients alone (4.5 ± 2.0,
p
= 0.023). For the MFSI subdomains among patients, diabetes was associated with worse general (
p
= 0.005) and mental fatigue (
p
= 0.026).
Conclusions
Diabetes was twice as prevalent in women with breast cancer compared to controls, and diabetes was associated with more severe cancer-related fatigue in patients before and after chemotherapy and at 6 months post-chemotherapy. Interventions that address diabetes management may also help address cancer-related fatigue during chemotherapy treatment.
Trial registration
ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01382082, first posted June 27, 2011. |
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ISSN: | 0941-4355 1433-7339 1433-7339 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s00520-022-07189-x |