Willard Victoria W, Klosky James L, Li Chenghong, Srivastava Deo Kumar, Brinkman Tara M, Robison Leslie L, Hudson Melissa M, Phipps Sean
Department of Psychology, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee.
Department of Biostatistics, St. Jude Children's Research Hospital, Memphis, Tennessee.
Cancer. 2017 May 1;123(9):1625-1634. doi: 10.1002/cncr.30514. Epub 2017 Jan 18.
The objective of this study was to describe perceptions and associated risk factors of the impact of cancer on functional outcomes, including social relationships, exercise, finances, and religion, among adult survivors of childhood cancer.
Evaluable participants included 3001 adult survivors (mean age, 32.5 years; range, 18.3-63.8 years; 24.1 years from diagnosis; 50.8% male; 84.9% Caucasian) who were enrolled in the St. Jude Lifetime Cohort study. Perceptions of the impact of cancer were assessed using the Brief Cancer Impact Assessment (BCIA). Regression models were used to evaluate risk factors for functional outcomes.
The median response on the BCIA was a perception that cancer had minimal impact on the domains assessed. Approximately 33.1% to 46.6% of survivors indicated this response across the 4 subscales, although responses ranged from very positive to very negative impact. Other than diagnosis (with survivors of brain tumors generally indicating a more negative impact of cancer, with subscale estimates of -1.25 for caregiving and finance and -1.01 for social and emotional and an odds ratio of 1.83 for exercise and diet), most variability was because of demographic factors, including sex, age, race, education, and employment.
The current findings highlight that many long-term adult survivors perceive minimal impact of childhood cancer on functional aspects of adulthood, including caregiving, finances, exercise, social-emotional relationships, and religion. This suggests that survivors may not be focusing on the influence of likely physical and psychological late effects of their disease in their day-to-day lives. For those who do perceive a negative impact, variability in responses suggests that there are of survivors who may benefit from interventions focused on the achievement of functional goals. Cancer 2017;123:1625-1634. © 2017 American Cancer Society.
本研究的目的是描述儿童癌症成年幸存者对癌症对功能结局(包括社会关系、运动、财务和宗教信仰)影响的认知及相关风险因素。
可评估的参与者包括3001名成年幸存者(平均年龄32.5岁;范围18.3 - 63.8岁;自确诊起24.1年;50.8%为男性;84.9%为白种人),他们参与了圣裘德终身队列研究。使用简明癌症影响评估(BCIA)来评估对癌症影响的认知。回归模型用于评估功能结局的风险因素。
BCIA的中位数反应是认为癌症对所评估领域的影响最小。约33.1%至46.6%的幸存者在4个分量表中均表示了这种反应,尽管反应范围从非常积极到非常消极。除了诊断情况(脑肿瘤幸存者通常表示癌症的负面影响更大,照顾和财务分量表估计值为 -1.25,社会和情感分量表估计值为 -1.01,运动和饮食的优势比为1.83)外,大多数差异是由于人口统计学因素,包括性别、年龄、种族、教育程度和就业情况。
当前研究结果表明,许多成年长期幸存者认为儿童癌症对成年期功能方面(包括照顾、财务、运动、社会情感关系和宗教信仰)的影响最小。这表明幸存者在日常生活中可能没有关注其疾病可能产生的身体和心理晚期效应的影响。对于那些确实感知到负面影响的人,反应的差异表明有一部分幸存者可能会从专注于实现功能目标的干预措施中受益。《癌症》2017年;123:1625 - 1634。©2017美国癌症协会。