Department of Oncology, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
Department of Biostatistics, Bioinformatics, and Biomathematics, Georgetown University, Washington, DC.
Cancer. 2020 Mar 15;126(6):1183-1192. doi: 10.1002/cncr.32663. Epub 2019 Dec 20.
Little is known about longitudinal symptom burden, its consequences for well-being, and whether lifestyle moderates the burden in older survivors.
The authors report on 36-month data from survivors aged ≥60 years with newly diagnosed, nonmetastatic breast cancer and noncancer controls recruited from August 2010 through June 2016. Symptom burden was measured as the sum of self-reported symptoms/diseases as follows: pain (yes or no), fatigue (on the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy [FACT]-Fatigue scale), cognitive (on the FACT-Cognitive scale), sleep problems (yes or no), depression (on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale), anxiety (on the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), and cardiac problems and neuropathy (yes or no). Well-being was measured using the FACT-General scale, with scores from 0 to 100. Lifestyle included smoking, alcohol use, body mass index, physical activity, and leisure activities. Mixed models assessed relations between treatment group (chemotherapy with or without hormone therapy, hormone therapy only, and controls) and symptom burden, lifestyle, and covariates. Separate models tested the effects of fluctuations in symptom burden and lifestyle on function.
All groups reported high baseline symptoms, and levels remained high over time; differences between survivors and controls were most notable for cognitive and sleep problems, anxiety, and neuropathy. The adjusted burden score was highest among chemotherapy-exposed survivors, followed by hormone therapy-exposed survivors versus controls (P < .001). The burden score was related to physical, emotional, and functional well-being (eg, survivors with lower vs higher burden scores had 12.4-point higher physical well-being scores). The composite lifestyle score was not related to symptom burden or well-being, but physical activity was significantly associated with each outcome (P < .005).
Cancer and its treatments are associated with a higher level of actionable symptoms and greater loss of well-being over time in older breast cancer survivors than in comparable noncancer populations, suggesting the need for surveillance and opportunities for intervention.
对于年长的癌症幸存者而言,纵向症状负担及其对幸福感的影响,以及生活方式是否会调节负担,目前知之甚少。
本研究报告了自 2010 年 8 月至 2016 年 6 月招募的年龄≥60 岁、新发非转移性乳腺癌幸存者和非癌症对照者的 36 个月数据。症状负担通过以下自报告症状/疾病的总和来衡量:疼痛(是或否)、疲劳(采用癌症治疗功能评估-疲劳量表)、认知(采用癌症治疗功能评估-认知量表)、睡眠问题(是或否)、抑郁(采用流行病学研究中心抑郁量表)、焦虑(采用状态-特质焦虑量表)以及心脏问题和周围神经病变(是或否)。幸福感采用癌症治疗功能评估-一般量表进行衡量,评分范围为 0 到 100。生活方式包括吸烟、饮酒、体重指数、身体活动和休闲活动。混合模型评估了治疗组(化疗加或不加激素治疗、激素治疗、对照组)与症状负担、生活方式以及协变量之间的关系。单独的模型检验了症状负担和生活方式波动对功能的影响。
所有组报告了高基线症状,且水平随时间推移仍保持较高水平;幸存者与对照组之间的差异在认知和睡眠问题、焦虑和周围神经病变方面最为明显。暴露于化疗的幸存者的调整后负担评分最高,其次是暴露于激素治疗的幸存者(P<0.001)。负担评分与身体、情感和功能幸福感相关(例如,负担评分较低的幸存者比评分较高的幸存者的身体幸福感评分高 12.4 分)。综合生活方式评分与症状负担或幸福感无关,但身体活动与每种结果均显著相关(P<0.005)。
与可比的非癌症人群相比,癌症及其治疗会导致年长的乳腺癌幸存者在较长时间内出现更多可干预的症状,幸福感下降幅度更大,表明需要进行监测并提供干预机会。