Tan Andy S L, Nagler Rebekah H, Hornik Robert C, DeMichele Angela
Department of Medical Oncology, Division of Population Sciences, Center for Community-Based Research, Dana-Farber Cancer Institute, Boston, Massachusetts. Department of Social and Behavioral Sciences, Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Massachusetts.
School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev. 2015 Jul;24(7):1071-8. doi: 10.1158/1055-9965.EPI-15-0041. Epub 2015 May 15.
This study describes how cancer survivors' information needs about recurrence, late effects, and family risks of cancer evolve over the course of their survivorship period.
Three annual surveys were conducted from 2006 to 2008 in a cohort of Pennsylvania cancer survivors diagnosed with colon, breast, or prostate cancer in 2005 (round 1, N = 2,013; round 2, N = 1,293; round 3, N = 1,128). Outcomes were information seeking about five survivorship topics. Key predictors were survey round, cancer diagnosis, and the interaction between these variables. Mixed-effects logistic regression analyses were performed to predict information seeking about each topic, adjusting for demographic variables, clinical characteristics, and clustering of repeated observations within individuals.
Information seeking about reducing risks of cancer recurrence was the most frequently reported topic across survivors and over time. Breast cancer survivors were more likely to seek about survivorship topics at round 1 compared with other survivors. In general, information seeking declined over time, but cancer-specific patterns emerged: the decline was sharpest for breast cancer survivors, whereas in later years female colon cancer survivors actually sought more information (about how to reduce the risk of family members getting colon cancer or a different cancer).
Cancer survivors' information needs varied over time depending on the topic, and these trends differed by cancer type.
Clinicians may need to intervene at distinct points during the survivorship period with information to address concerns about cancer recurrence, late effects, and family members' risks.
本研究描述了癌症幸存者关于癌症复发、远期效应和癌症家族风险的信息需求在其生存期内是如何演变的。
2006年至2008年对2005年被诊断患有结肠癌、乳腺癌或前列腺癌的宾夕法尼亚州癌症幸存者队列进行了三次年度调查(第一轮,N = 2013;第二轮,N = 1293;第三轮,N = 1128)。结果是关于五个生存主题的信息寻求情况。关键预测因素是调查轮次、癌症诊断以及这些变量之间的相互作用。进行了混合效应逻辑回归分析,以预测每个主题的信息寻求情况,并对人口统计学变量、临床特征以及个体内重复观察的聚类情况进行了调整。
在幸存者中以及随着时间推移,寻求降低癌症复发风险的信息是最常被报告的主题。与其他幸存者相比,乳腺癌幸存者在第一轮更有可能寻求关于生存主题的信息。总体而言,信息寻求随着时间的推移而减少,但出现了癌症特异性模式:乳腺癌幸存者的下降最为明显,而在后期,女性结肠癌幸存者实际上寻求了更多信息(关于如何降低家庭成员患结肠癌或其他癌症的风险)。
癌症幸存者的信息需求随时间因主题而异,并且这些趋势因癌症类型而异。
临床医生可能需要在生存期的不同时间点进行干预,提供信息以解决对癌症复发、远期效应和家庭成员风险的担忧。