Absetz Pilvikki, Aro Arja R, Sutton Stephen R
Department of Epidemiology and Health Promotion, National Public Health Institute, Helsinki, Finland.
Psychooncology. 2003 Jun;12(4):305-18. doi: 10.1002/pon.644.
This prospective study examined whether the psychological impact of organized mammography screening is influenced by women's pre-existing experience with breast cancer and perceived susceptibility (PS) to the disease. From a target population of 16,886, a random sample of women with a normal screening finding and all women with a false positive or a benign biopsy finding were included (N=1942). Data were collected with postal questionnaires 1-month before screening invitation and 2 and 12 months after screening. Response rate was 63% at baseline; 86, and 80% of the baseline participants responded to the follow-ups. Psychological impact was measured as anxiety (STAI-S), depression (BDI), health-related concerns (IAS), and breast cancer-specific beliefs and concerns. Data was analyzed with repeated measures analyses of variance, with estimates of effect size based on Eta-squared. Women with breast cancer experience had higher risk perception already before screening invitation; after screening they were also more distressed. Women with high PS were more distressed than women with low PS also at pre-invitation. The distress was not alleviated by screening, but instead remained even after normal mammograms. Experience and PS did not influence responses to different screening findings. Of the finding groups, false positives experienced most adverse effects: their risk perception increased and they reported most post-screening breast cancer-specific concerns. Furthermore, they became more frequent in breast self-examination (BSE) despite a simultaneous decrease in BSE self-efficacy. Our findings suggest that women with high PS and women with false positive screening finding may need individualized counseling and follow-up as much as women with a family history of breast cancer. Besides medical risk factors, women's own perceptions of susceptibility should be discussed during the screening process.
这项前瞻性研究调查了有组织的乳房X光筛查的心理影响是否受女性既往乳腺癌经历和对该疾病的感知易感性(PS)的影响。从16,886名目标人群中,纳入了筛查结果正常的女性随机样本以及所有筛查结果为假阳性或活检结果为良性的女性(N = 1942)。在筛查邀请前1个月、筛查后2个月和12个月通过邮政问卷收集数据。基线时的回复率为63%;基线参与者中分别有86%和80%对随访进行了回复。心理影响通过焦虑(状态-特质焦虑量表-状态分量表,STAI-S)、抑郁(贝克抑郁量表,BDI)、健康相关担忧(医学应对问卷,IAS)以及乳腺癌特异性信念和担忧来衡量。数据采用重复测量方差分析进行分析,并基于偏 eta 平方估计效应大小。有乳腺癌经历的女性在筛查邀请前就有较高的风险感知;筛查后她们也更痛苦。高PS的女性在邀请前也比低PS的女性更痛苦。筛查并没有减轻痛苦,反而即使在乳房X光检查正常后痛苦仍然存在。经历和PS并不影响对不同筛查结果的反应。在各结果组中,假阳性经历的不良影响最大:她们的风险感知增加,并且报告了最多的筛查后乳腺癌特异性担忧。此外,尽管乳房自我检查(BSE)自我效能感同时下降,但她们进行乳房自我检查的频率却增加了。我们的研究结果表明,高PS的女性和筛查结果为假阳性的女性可能与有乳腺癌家族史的女性一样需要个体化咨询和随访。除了医学风险因素外,在筛查过程中还应讨论女性自身的易感性认知。