Wells Jessica S, Strickland Ora L, Dalton Jo Ann, Freeman Sarah
Author Affiliations: Nell Hodgson Woodruff School of Nursing, Emory University, Atlanta, Georgia (Drs Wells, Dalton, and Freeman); and Nicole Wertheim College of Nursing and Health Sciences, Florida International University, Miami (Dr Strickland).
Cancer Nurs. 2015 Mar-Apr;38(2):89-98. doi: 10.1097/NCC.0000000000000139.
Adherence to intravenous chemotherapy offers survival and recurrence-free benefits for women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer. However, previous studies have found that African American women are more likely to discontinue intravenous chemotherapy early, thus shortening their survival. Yet the existence of racial differences and predictors of adherence to chemotherapy treatment between African American and white women are largely understudied or inconsistent.
The purposes of this study were to examine factors that influence the decision to adhere to chemotherapy in African American and white women diagnosed with early-stage breast cancer and to test for racial differences that may exist in this sample.
INTERVENTIONS/METHODS: The study recruited a convenience sample of 99 African American and white women. Factors examined were sociodemographic variables (age, race, access to healthcare), social support, religious coping, chemotherapy adverse effects, depression, breast cancer knowledge, health beliefs, cancer fatalism, and days from diagnosis to treatment. Data analyses included logistic regression modeling.
No racial differences in adherence to intravenous chemotherapy between African American and white women were found (χ = 2.627, P = .10). Days to treatment (odds ratio [OR], 0.982, P = .058), health insurance (OR, 0.121; P = .016), change in depression (OR, 0.935; P = .118), and symptom severity (OR, 0.950; P = .038) were independently associated with nonadherence to chemotherapy.
This study provides emerging evidence of factors that may be potentially modified with interventions at the clinical setting.
The findings can be used to spearhead future intervention studies that improve treatment decision making to chemotherapy adherence.
坚持静脉化疗可为被诊断为早期乳腺癌的女性带来生存和无复发的益处。然而,先前的研究发现,非裔美国女性更有可能提前停止静脉化疗,从而缩短她们的生存期。然而,非裔美国女性和白人女性在化疗治疗依从性方面的种族差异及预测因素在很大程度上未得到充分研究或结果不一致。
本研究的目的是检查影响被诊断为早期乳腺癌的非裔美国女性和白人女性坚持化疗决定的因素,并测试该样本中可能存在的种族差异。
干预措施/方法:该研究招募了99名非裔美国女性和白人女性的便利样本。所检查的因素包括社会人口统计学变量(年龄、种族、获得医疗保健的机会)、社会支持、宗教应对、化疗不良反应、抑郁、乳腺癌知识、健康信念、癌症宿命论以及从诊断到治疗的天数。数据分析包括逻辑回归建模。
未发现非裔美国女性和白人女性在静脉化疗依从性方面存在种族差异(χ = 2.627,P = 0.10)。治疗天数(比值比[OR],0.982,P = 0.058)、健康保险(OR,0.121;P = 0.016)、抑郁变化(OR,0.935;P = 0.118)和症状严重程度(OR,0.950;P = 0.038)与不坚持化疗独立相关。
本研究提供了可能通过临床环境中的干预措施进行潜在改变的因素的新证据。
这些发现可用于推动未来的干预研究,以改善化疗依从性的治疗决策。