Montazeri Ali
Iranian Institute for Health Sciences Research, Tehran, Iran.
J Exp Clin Cancer Res. 2008 Aug 29;27(1):32. doi: 10.1186/1756-9966-27-32.
Quality of life in patients with breast cancer is an important outcome. This paper presents an extensive overview on the topic ranging from descriptive findings to clinical trials.
This was a bibliographic review of the literature covering all full publications that appeared in English language biomedical journals between 1974 and 2007. The search strategy included a combination of key words 'quality of life' and 'breast cancer' or 'breast carcinoma' in titles. A total of 971 citations were identified and after exclusion of duplicates, the abstracts of 606 citations were reviewed. Of these, meetings abstracts, editorials, brief commentaries, letters, errata and dissertation abstracts and papers that appeared online and were indexed ahead of publication were also excluded. The remaining 477 papers were examined. The major findings are summarized and presented under several headings: instruments used, validation studies, measurement issues, surgical treatment, systemic therapies, quality of life as predictor of survival, psychological distress, supportive care, symptoms and sexual functioning.
Instruments-Several valid instruments were used to measure quality of life in breast cancer patients. The European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Core Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30) and its breast cancer specific complementary measure (EORTC QLQ-BR23) and the Functional Assessment Chronic Illness Therapy General questionnaire (FACIT-G) and its breast cancer module (FACIT-B) were found to be the most common and well developed instruments to measure quality of life in breast cancer patients. Surgery-different surgical procedures led to relatively similar results in terms of quality of life assessments, although mastectomy patients compared to conserving surgery patients usually reported a lower body image and sexual functioning. Systemic therapies-almost all studies indicated that breast cancer patients receiving chemotherapy might experience several side-effects and symptoms that negatively affect their quality of life. Adjuvant hormonal therapies also were found to have similar negative impact on quality of life, although in general they were associated with improved survival. Quality of life as predictor of survival-similar to known medical factors, quality of life data in metastatic breast cancer patients was found to be prognostic and predictive of survival time. Psychological distress-anxiety and depression were found to be common among breast cancer patients even years after the disease diagnosis and treatment. Psychological factors also were found to predict subsequent quality of life or even overall survival in breast cancer patients. Supportive care-clinical treatments to control emesis, or interventions such as counseling, providing social support and exercise could improve quality of life. Symptoms-Pain, fatigue, arm morbidity and postmenopausal symptoms were among the most common symptoms reported by breast cancer patients. As recommended, recognition and management of these symptoms is an important issue since such symptoms impair health-related quality of life. Sexual functioning-breast cancer patients especially younger patients suffer from poor sexual functioning that negatively affect quality of life.
There was quite an extensive body of the literature on quality of life in breast cancer patients. These papers have made a considerable contribution to improving breast cancer care, although their exact benefit was hard to define. However, quality of life data provided scientific evidence for clinical decision-making and conveyed helpful information concerning breast cancer patients' experiences during the course of the disease diagnosis, treatment, disease-free survival time, and recurrences; otherwise finding patient-centered solutions for evidence-based selection of optimal treatments, psychosocial interventions, patient-physician communications, allocation of resources, and indicating research priorities were impossible. It seems that more qualitative research is needed for a better understanding of the topic. In addition, issues related to the disease, its treatment side effects and symptoms, and sexual functioning should receive more attention when studying quality of life in breast cancer patients.
乳腺癌患者的生活质量是一项重要的结果指标。本文对该主题进行了广泛综述,内容涵盖描述性研究结果至临床试验。
这是一项文献综述,涵盖了1974年至2007年间在英文生物医学期刊上发表的所有完整出版物。检索策略包括在标题中组合关键词“生活质量”和“乳腺癌”或“乳癌”。共识别出971条引文,排除重复项后,对606条引文的摘要进行了审查。其中,会议摘要、社论、简短评论、信件、勘误、论文摘要以及提前在线发表并被索引的论文也被排除。对其余477篇论文进行了审查。主要研究结果在几个标题下进行了总结和呈现:使用的工具、验证研究、测量问题、手术治疗、全身治疗、生活质量作为生存预测指标、心理困扰、支持性护理、症状和性功能。
工具——使用了几种有效的工具来测量乳腺癌患者的生活质量。欧洲癌症研究与治疗组织核心癌症生活质量问卷(EORTC QLQ-C30)及其乳腺癌特异性补充量表(EORTC QLQ-BR23)以及慢性病功能评估通用问卷(FACIT-G)及其乳腺癌模块(FACIT-B)被发现是测量乳腺癌患者生活质量最常用且完善的工具。手术——不同的手术程序在生活质量评估方面导致相对相似的结果,尽管与保乳手术患者相比,乳房切除术患者通常报告身体形象和性功能较低。全身治疗——几乎所有研究表明,接受化疗的乳腺癌患者可能会经历多种副作用和症状,这些会对他们的生活质量产生负面影响。辅助激素治疗也被发现对生活质量有类似的负面影响,尽管总体上它们与生存率的提高相关。生活质量作为生存预测指标——与已知的医学因素类似,转移性乳腺癌患者的生活质量数据被发现具有预后价值并可预测生存时间。心理困扰——焦虑和抑郁在乳腺癌患者中很常见,甚至在疾病诊断和治疗后的数年也是如此。心理因素也被发现可预测乳腺癌患者随后的生活质量甚至总体生存情况。支持性护理——控制呕吐的临床治疗或咨询、提供社会支持和锻炼等干预措施可改善生活质量。症状——疼痛、疲劳、手臂并发症和绝经后症状是乳腺癌患者报告的最常见症状。按照建议,识别和管理这些症状是一个重要问题,因为这些症状会损害与健康相关的生活质量。性功能——乳腺癌患者尤其是年轻患者性功能较差,这对生活质量产生负面影响。
关于乳腺癌患者生活质量的文献相当丰富。这些论文对改善乳腺癌护理做出了相当大的贡献,尽管其确切益处难以界定。然而,生活质量数据为临床决策提供了科学依据,并传达了有关乳腺癌患者在疾病诊断、治疗、无病生存时间和复发过程中的经历的有用信息;否则,要找到以患者为中心的解决方案,用于基于证据选择最佳治疗方法、心理社会干预、医患沟通、资源分配以及指明研究重点是不可能的。似乎需要更多的定性研究来更好地理解该主题。此外,在研究乳腺癌患者的生活质量时,与疾病、其治疗副作用和症状以及性功能相关的问题应受到更多关注。