Cancer Prevention and Control Program, Fox Chase Cancer Center, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA.
Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, Maryland, USA.
Psychooncology. 2021 May;30(5):681-690. doi: 10.1002/pon.5613. Epub 2020 Dec 23.
Many women with breast cancer (BC) hesitate to raise sexual concerns clinically. We evaluated a multimedia intervention to facilitate BC patients' communication about sexual/menopausal health, called Starting the Conversation (STC).
Female BC patients (N = 144) were randomly assigned to either STC (20-min video, workbook, and resource guide) or control (resource guide only). Audio-recorded dialogue from patients' next oncology clinic encounter was coded for patients' sexual health communication. Self-report surveys assessed patients' beliefs about sexual health communication, self-efficacy for clinical interactions, sexual function/activity, anxiety/depression symptoms, and quality of life at baseline, post-intervention, and 2-month follow-up. T-tests or mixed-effects logistic regression compared study arms.
Women in the STC arm were more likely to raise the topic of sexual health (51%; OR = 2.62 [1.02, 6.69], p = 0.04) and ask a sexual health question (40%; OR = 2.85 [1.27, 6.38], p = 0.01) during their clinic encounter than those in the control arm (30% and 19% for raise and ask, respectively). At follow-up, women in the STC arm showed greater improvements in sexual health communication self-efficacy (p = 0.009) and in anxiety symptoms (p = 0.03), and more women were sexually active at follow-up, compared to the control arm (OR = 1.5, 70% vs. 46%, p = 0.04).
The STC intervention facilitated women's clinical communication about sexual health and reduced women's anxiety, possibly due to increased confidence in expressing their medical needs. Helpful information gained from clinical discussions could have improved women's willingness or ability to engage in sexual activity. Future studies should identify aspects of the clinical encounter most critical to improving women's sexual outcomes.
许多乳腺癌(BC)患者在临床治疗中不愿提出与性健康相关的问题。我们评估了一种名为“开启对话”(STC)的多媒体干预措施,以促进 BC 患者对性/更年期健康的沟通。
将 144 名女性 BC 患者随机分配到 STC(20 分钟视频、工作簿和资源指南)或对照组(仅资源指南)。对患者下一次肿瘤科就诊时的音频记录对话进行编码,以评估患者的性健康沟通情况。在基线、干预后和 2 个月随访时,使用自我报告问卷评估患者对性健康沟通的信念、临床互动的自我效能感、性功能/活动、焦虑/抑郁症状和生活质量。使用 t 检验或混合效应逻辑回归比较研究组。
STC 组的女性更有可能在就诊时提出性健康话题(51%;OR=2.62[1.02,6.69],p=0.04)和询问性健康问题(40%;OR=2.85[1.27,6.38],p=0.01),而对照组分别为 30%和 19%。在随访时,STC 组患者的性健康沟通自我效能感(p=0.009)和焦虑症状(p=0.03)改善更为显著,且在随访时更多的女性表现出活跃的性生活(OR=1.5,70%对 46%,p=0.04)。
STC 干预措施促进了女性在临床治疗中对性健康的沟通,并降低了女性的焦虑程度,这可能是由于她们在表达自身医疗需求方面的信心增强所致。从临床讨论中获得的有用信息可能提高了女性参与性行为的意愿或能力。未来的研究应确定改善女性性健康结局的关键临床方面。