Johannsen M, Christensen S, Zachariae R, Jensen A B
Unit for Psychooncology and Health Psychology, Department of Oncology, Aarhus University Hospital, Bartholins Allé 9, Bld. 1340, 8000, Aarhus C, Denmark,
Breast Cancer Res Treat. 2015 Aug;152(3):645-58. doi: 10.1007/s10549-015-3497-x. Epub 2015 Jul 19.
The purpose of this study was to investigate and report prevalence and risk factors for persistent pain in breast cancer patients at 15 months and 7-9 years post surgery. A nationwide inception cohort study including 3343 women treated for primary breast cancer between 2001 and 2004, who returned a questionnaire 3 months post surgery. Socio-demographic and clinical information was obtained from registries. Questionnaire data on pain and health behaviors were obtained 15 months and 7-9 years post surgery. A total of 1905 women were eligible for analysis. At 15-month post surgery, 32.7 % reported pain "almost every day" or more frequently. At 7-9 years post surgery, the prevalence decreased to 20.4 %. Socio-demographic (young age, lower education, lower income, lower occupational status), treatment-related (being lymph node positive, axillary lymph node dissection (ALND), post-menopausal endocrine treatment), and health behavioral factors (smoking ≥ 10 cigarettes/day, obesity (BMI ≥ 30 and < 35), comorbidity, poor physical function) were significantly associated with pain at 15 months. Being physically active and moderate alcohol intake (<3 units/day) were negatively associated with pain. At 7-9 years post surgery, only ALND (OR:1.41, p = 0.03), post-menopausal endocrine treatment (OR:1.62, p = 0.01), poorer physical function (ORs:2.00-2.40, p = 0.003), and weight training (h/week) at 15 months (OR:1.10, p = 0.008) were significant predictors of pain when adjusting for age and pain 15 months post surgery. No socio-demographic predictors remained statistically significant. Younger age, lower socio-economic status, more invasive surgery, endocrine treatment, and adverse health behaviors emerged as risk factors for persistent pain. The influence of risk factors changed over time, suggesting a complex course of pain development and maintenance.
本研究旨在调查并报告乳腺癌患者术后15个月及7 - 9年持续性疼痛的患病率及危险因素。一项全国性的队列起始研究,纳入了2001年至2004年间接受原发性乳腺癌治疗的3343名女性,她们在术后3个月返回了一份问卷。社会人口统计学和临床信息从登记处获取。术后15个月及7 - 9年收集了关于疼痛和健康行为的问卷数据。共有1905名女性符合分析条件。术后15个月时,32.7%的女性报告“几乎每天”或更频繁地疼痛。术后7 - 9年,患病率降至20.4%。社会人口统计学因素(年轻、低学历、低收入、低职业地位)、治疗相关因素(淋巴结阳性、腋窝淋巴结清扫术(ALND)、绝经后内分泌治疗)以及健康行为因素(每天吸烟≥10支、肥胖(BMI≥30且<35)、合并症、身体功能差)与术后15个月的疼痛显著相关。身体活跃和适度饮酒(每天<3单位)与疼痛呈负相关。术后7 - 9年,在调整年龄和术后15个月的疼痛情况后,只有ALND(比值比:1.41,p = 0.03)、绝经后内分泌治疗(比值比:1.62,p = 0.01)、较差的身体功能(比值比:2.00 - 2.40,p = 0.003)以及术后15个月时的体重训练(每周小时数)(比值比:1.10,p = 0.008)是疼痛的显著预测因素。没有社会人口统计学预测因素仍具有统计学意义。年轻、较低的社会经济地位、更具侵入性的手术、内分泌治疗以及不良健康行为成为持续性疼痛的危险因素。危险因素的影响随时间变化,表明疼痛发展和维持过程复杂。