Cyprus University of Technology, Limassol, Cyprus.
Nursing Science, University of Turku, Turku, Finland.
BMJ Open. 2019 Jan 24;9(1):e026809. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-026809.
Cancer treatment is a particularly stressful period for the patient. The reasons vary and include fear of treatment outcome as well as treatment induced side effects. The patient frequently experiences simultaneously various side effects resulting in a diminishing of the patient's health-related quality of life (HRQoL). The study provides evidence on the co-occurrence and inter-relations between pain, anxiety, depression and fatigue in patients with breast and prostate cancer.
This paper presents a secondary analysis of the data from a randomised control trial designed to test the effectiveness of guided imagery and progressive muscle relaxation on pain, fatigue, anxiety and depression. Non-parametric bootstrapping analyses were used to test the mediational model of anxiety, fatigue and depression as parallel mediators of the relationship between pain and HRQoL.
The study was undertaken at the home setting.
In total 208 patients were included in the study (assigned equally in two groups), referred at the outpatient clinics of the three participating cancer care centres.
The three mediators fully mediate the relationship between pain and HRQoL indirect effect (IE=-0.3839, 95% CI: lower limit (LL)=-0.5073 to upper limit (UL)=-0.2825) indicating that patients with increased pain are likely to have higher levels of anxiety, fatigue and depression. Gender significantly moderated the mediational effect of Fatigue Index of Moderated Mediation (IMM=-0.2867 SE=0.1526, LL=-0.6127, UL=-0.0226) but did not moderate mediational effect of anxiety (IMM=-0.0709, SE=0.1414, LL=-0.3459, UL=+0.2089). The results show that the three mediators in a serial causal order fully mediate the relationship between pain and HRQoL (IE=-0.384, 95% CI: LL=-0.51 to UL=-0.284) and the ratio of the overall indirect effect to the total effect is 0.8315 (95% CI: LL=0.5683 to UL=1.1718).
This work provides evidence that targeting fatigue, anxiety and depression may have a meaningful effect on pain as a related symptom and potentially have a positive impact on HRQoL of patients with breast and prostate cancer TRIAL REGISTRATION NUMBER: NCT01275872; Post-results.
癌症治疗对患者来说是一个特别有压力的时期。原因包括对治疗结果的恐惧以及治疗引起的副作用。患者经常同时经历各种副作用,导致其健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)下降。该研究提供了乳腺癌和前列腺癌患者疼痛、焦虑、抑郁和疲劳同时发生和相互关系的证据。
本文对一项旨在测试引导想象和渐进性肌肉放松对疼痛、疲劳、焦虑和抑郁影响的随机对照试验数据进行了二次分析。非参数引导.bootstrap 分析用于测试焦虑、疲劳和抑郁作为疼痛与 HRQoL 之间关系的平行中介的中介模型。
该研究在家中进行。
共有 208 名患者(平均分为两组)纳入研究,他们被分配到三个参与癌症护理中心的门诊诊所。
三个中介完全中介疼痛与 HRQoL 之间的关系(间接效应(IE)=-0.3839,95%CI:下限(LL)=-0.5073,上限(UL)=-0.2825),表明疼痛增加的患者可能会出现更高水平的焦虑、疲劳和抑郁。性别显著调节疲劳中介效应的 moderated mediation(IMM=-0.2867,SE=0.1526,LL=-0.6127,UL=-0.0226),但不调节焦虑的中介效应(IMM=-0.0709,SE=0.1414,LL=-0.3459,UL=+0.2089)。结果表明,三个中介物以串联因果顺序完全中介疼痛与 HRQoL 之间的关系(IE=-0.384,95%CI:LL=-0.51,UL=-0.284),并且总间接效应与总效应的比值为 0.8315(95%CI:LL=0.5683,UL=1.1718)。
这项工作提供了证据表明,针对疲劳、焦虑和抑郁可能对疼痛作为相关症状产生有意义的影响,并可能对乳腺癌和前列腺癌患者的 HRQoL 产生积极影响。
NCT01275872;Post-results。