Lerman C, Trock B, Rimer B K, Boyce A, Jepson C, Engstrom P F
Fox Chase Cancer Center, Cheltenham, Pennsylvania.
Ann Intern Med. 1991 Apr 15;114(8):657-61. doi: 10.7326/0003-4819-114-8-657.
To evaluate women's psychological responses to abnormal mammograms and the effect on mammography adherence. To identify psychological responses and other factors that predict mammography adherence in women with normal or abnormal mammograms.
Survey study with prospective analysis of factors associated with mammography adherence.
Health Maintenance Organization of Pennsylvania and New Jersey (HMO PA/NJ).
Study patients, members of HMO PA/NJ who were 50 years of age or older, and who had had mammography done 3 months earlier, included women with normal mammograms (n = 121), women with low-suspicion mammograms (n = 119), and women with high-suspicion mammograms (n = 68), but not women with breast cancer.
Psychological responses 3 months after mammography and adherence to subsequent annual mammography were assessed.
Women with high-suspicion mammograms had substantial mammography-related anxiety (47%) and worries about breast cancer (41%). Such worries affected the moods (26%) and daily functioning (17%) of these women, despite diagnostic evaluation excluding malignancy. For each variable, a consistent trend (P greater than 0.05) was seen with degree of mammogram abnormality. Sixty-eight percent of women with normal results, 78% of women with low-suspicion results, and 74% of women with high-suspicion results obtained their subsequent annual mammograms (P greater than 0.05). The number of previous mammograms (odds ratio, 3.2; 95% CI, 1.6 to 6.2) and the effect of the previous results on concerns about breast cancer (odds ratio, 0.5; CI, 0.2 to 1.0) were independent predictors of adherence in logistic regression analyses (P less than 0.05).
A substantial proportion of women with suspicious mammograms have psychological difficulties, even after learning that they do not have cancer. Such sequelae do not appear to interfere with subsequent adherence.
评估女性对乳腺钼靶检查结果异常的心理反应及其对乳腺钼靶检查依从性的影响。识别在乳腺钼靶检查结果正常或异常的女性中预测乳腺钼靶检查依从性的心理反应及其他因素。
对与乳腺钼靶检查依从性相关因素进行前瞻性分析的调查研究。
宾夕法尼亚州和新泽西州的健康维护组织(HMO PA/NJ)。
研究对象为HMO PA/NJ的成员,年龄在50岁及以上,且在3个月前进行过乳腺钼靶检查,包括乳腺钼靶检查结果正常的女性(n = 121)、低可疑结果的女性(n = 119)和高可疑结果的女性(n = 68),但不包括乳腺癌患者。
评估乳腺钼靶检查3个月后的心理反应以及对随后年度乳腺钼靶检查的依从性。
乳腺钼靶检查结果高可疑的女性存在大量与乳腺钼靶检查相关的焦虑(47%)以及对乳腺癌的担忧(41%)。尽管诊断评估排除了恶性肿瘤,但这些担忧仍影响了这些女性的情绪(26%)和日常功能(17%)。对于每个变量,随着乳腺钼靶检查异常程度呈现出一致的趋势(P大于0.05)。乳腺钼靶检查结果正常的女性中有68%、低可疑结果的女性中有78%、高可疑结果的女性中有74%进行了随后的年度乳腺钼靶检查(P大于0.05)。在逻辑回归分析中,既往乳腺钼靶检查的次数(比值比,3.2;95%可信区间,1.6至6.2)以及既往检查结果对乳腺癌担忧的影响(比值比,0.5;可信区间,0.2至1.0)是依从性的独立预测因素(P小于0.05)。
相当一部分乳腺钼靶检查结果可疑的女性存在心理问题,即使在得知自己没有患癌症之后。这些后遗症似乎并未干扰随后的依从性。