Department of Psychiatry, Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics, Medical University of Innsbruck, Christoph-Probst-Platz 1, Innrain 52, 6020, Innsbruck, Austria.
Sussex Health Outcomes, Research & Education in Cancer (SHORE-C), University of Sussex, Brighton, BN1 9PX, UK.
BMC Cancer. 2017 Aug 30;17(1):599. doi: 10.1186/s12885-017-3580-2.
BACKGROUND: Cancer survivorship is of increasing importance in post-treatment care. Sexual health (SH) and femininity can be crucial issues for women surviving cancer. We aimed to determine a more complete understanding of the contribution that a breast cancer (BC) diagnosis and its treatment exert on patients' follow-up SH. For this purpose, self-reported levels and predictors of SH in breast cancer survivors (BCS) were compared with those of women with no previous or current BC (WNBC). METHODS: BCS and WNBC underwent a comprehensive, cross-sectional patient-reported outcome (PRO) assessment. Validated PRO instruments were used to measure SH, body image, anxiety and depression and menopausal symptoms. Assessments were performed within the routine clinical setting. Instruments used were the Sexual Interest and Desire Inventory - Female, Sexual Activity Questionnaire, Body Image Scale, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale and the Menopause-Specific Quality of Life Questionnaire. RESULTS: One hundred five BCS (average time since diagnosis of 3 years) and 97 WNBC with a mean age of 49 years completed the assessment. SH was significantly worse in BCS compared to WNBC (p = 0.005; BCS SIDI-F mean = 24.9 vs. WNBC mean = 29.8). 68.8% of BCS and 58.8% of WNBC met criteria of a hypo-active sexual desire disorder. Higher depressive symptoms, higher age and lower partnership satisfaction were predictive for poorer SH in BCS. CONCLUSION: SH problems are apparent in BCS and differ significantly from those seen in the general population. Consequently, BC survivorship care should include interventions to ameliorate sexual dysfunction and provide help with depressive symptoms and partnership problems, which are associated with poor BCS SH.
背景:癌症生存者在治疗后护理中变得越来越重要。性健康(SH)和女性气质对于癌症生存者来说可能是至关重要的问题。我们旨在确定更全面地了解乳腺癌(BC)诊断及其治疗对患者后续 SH 的影响。为此,我们比较了乳腺癌幸存者(BCS)的自我报告的 SH 水平和预测因素与无既往或当前 BC(WNBC)的女性。
方法:BCS 和 WNBC 接受了全面的横断面患者报告结局(PRO)评估。使用经过验证的 PRO 工具来衡量 SH、身体形象、焦虑和抑郁以及更年期症状。评估是在常规临床环境中进行的。使用的工具包括女性性欲和欲望量表-女性、性活动问卷、身体形象量表、医院焦虑和抑郁量表以及更年期特异性生活质量量表。
结果:105 名 BCS(诊断后平均时间为 3 年)和 97 名平均年龄为 49 岁的 WNBC 完成了评估。与 WNBC 相比,BCS 的 SH 明显更差(p=0.005;BCS SIDI-F 平均值=24.9 比 WNBC 平均值=29.8)。68.8%的 BCS 和 58.8%的 WNBC 符合低活跃性性欲障碍的标准。较高的抑郁症状、较高的年龄和较低的伴侣满意度是 BCS SH 较差的预测因素。
结论:BCS 中存在 SH 问题,与一般人群中的差异显著。因此,BC 生存者护理应包括干预措施,以改善性功能障碍,并提供帮助治疗抑郁症状和伴侣问题,这些问题与 BCS 的 SH 较差有关。
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