Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center, and.
Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
J Natl Compr Canc Netw. 2019 Mar 1;17(3):221-228. doi: 10.6004/jnccn.2018.7098.
Oral therapies are increasingly common in oncology care. However, data are lacking regarding the physical and psychologic symptoms patients experience, or how these factors relate to medication adherence and quality of life (QoL).
From December 2014 through August 2016, a total of 181 adult patients who were prescribed oral targeted therapy or chemotherapy enrolled in a randomized study of adherence and symptom management at Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center. Patients completed baseline assessments of adherence with electronic pill cap, QoL, symptom severity, mood, social support, fatigue, and satisfaction with clinicians and treatment. Relationships among these factors were examined using Pearson product-moment correlations and multivariable linear regression.
At baseline, the mean electronic pill cap adherence rate showed that patients took 85.57% of their oral therapy. The most commonly reported cancer-related symptoms were fatigue (88.60%), drowsiness (76.50%), disturbed sleep (68.20%), memory problems (63.10%), and emotional distress (60.80%). Patients who reported greater cancer-related symptom severity had lower adherence (r= -0.20). In a multivariable regression, greater depressive and anxiety symptoms, worse fatigue, less social support, lower satisfaction with clinicians and treatment, and higher symptom burden were associated with worse QoL (F[10, 146]=50.53; adjusted R2=0.77). Anxiety symptoms were most strongly associated with clinically meaningful decrements in QoL (β= -7.10; SE=0.22).
Patients prescribed oral therapies struggle with adherence, and cancer-related symptom burden is high and related to worse adherence and QoL. Given perceptions that oral therapies are less impairing, these data underscore the strong need to address adherence issues, symptom burden, and QoL for these patients.
在肿瘤学治疗中,口服治疗越来越常见。然而,关于患者所经历的生理和心理症状的数据却很缺乏,也不知道这些因素与药物依从性和生活质量(QoL)有何关系。
从 2014 年 12 月到 2016 年 8 月,共有 181 名在马萨诸塞州综合医院癌症中心接受口服靶向治疗或化疗的成年患者参加了一项关于药物依从性和症状管理的随机研究。患者在基线时完成电子药盒服药依从性、QoL、症状严重程度、情绪、社会支持、疲劳和对医生及治疗的满意度评估。使用 Pearson 积矩相关系数和多变量线性回归分析这些因素之间的关系。
在基线时,电子药盒的平均服药依从率显示患者服用了 85.57%的口服治疗药物。最常见的与癌症相关的症状是疲劳(88.60%)、困倦(76.50%)、睡眠障碍(68.20%)、记忆问题(63.10%)和情绪困扰(60.80%)。报告癌症相关症状严重程度较高的患者,其依从性较低(r=-0.20)。在多变量回归中,更严重的抑郁和焦虑症状、更严重的疲劳、较少的社会支持、对医生和治疗的满意度较低以及更高的症状负担与较差的 QoL 相关(F[10,146]=50.53;调整后的 R2=0.77)。焦虑症状与 QoL 有显著的临床意义下降(β=-7.10;SE=0.22)。
接受口服治疗的患者在依从性方面存在困难,癌症相关的症状负担很高,与较差的依从性和 QoL 有关。鉴于人们认为口服治疗的损害较小,这些数据突出表明,强烈需要解决这些患者的依从性问题、症状负担和 QoL。