The University of Chicago Medicine, Department of Gynecology/ Obstetrics, Section of Gynecologic Oncology, Chicago, IL.
Department of Medicine, Section of Hematology/Oncology, MacLean Center for Clinical Medical Ethics, Cancer Research Center, Supportive Oncology Program, Chicago, IL.
JCO Oncol Pract. 2022 Jun;18(6):e948-e957. doi: 10.1200/OP.21.00514. Epub 2022 Feb 24.
The COVID-19 pandemic has created new challenges for ovarian cancer survivors. This study aims to evaluate the psychologic morbidity and alterations in medical care caused by the pandemic.
Advanced-stage ovarian cancer survivors at our institution were contacted for participation in a cross-sectional telephone-based quantitative survey study assessing pandemic-related psychologic morbidity. Psychologic domains using validated measures were explored: health-related quality of life (HRQOL; functional assessment of cancer therapy [FACT-G7]), anxiety (generalized anxiety disorder-7 [GAD7]), depression (Patient Health Questionnarie-2 [PHQ2]), global health Patient-Reported Outcomes Measurement Information System - Global Physical Health/Global Mental Health (PROMIS-GMH/GPH), resilience (brief resilience scale), and loneliness (English Longitudinal Study on Aging). Novel COVID-19 pandemic questions were drawn from a larger survey developed in our department.
Fifty-nine percent (61 of 104) of contacted patients completed the survey. One quarter of respondents had high resilience, with only 10% reporting low resilience. Only one patient screened positive for depression, and two for anxiety. Increased loneliness was reported by 43% of respondents. Patients' overall HRQOL was good (median = 21; range = 6-28). Few patients experienced treatment delays, with only four experiencing chemotherapy interruption and two reporting surgical delays. Multiple regression analyses revealed that high FACT-G7 HRQOL was predicted by age > 65 years, high self-reported mental health, high resilience, and being off chemotherapy. Lower COVID-19 concern was predicted by recurrent cancer and high resilience.
Despite the far-reaching impact of the COVID-19 pandemic, ovarian cancer survivors' HRQOL has been maintained. Older age, high resilience, high mental health, and being off chemotherapy predicted better HRQOL. Ovarian cancer survivors remain resilient in the face of the pandemic, and the support of clinicians to preserve this invaluable personal resource is critical for well-being.
COVID-19 大流行给卵巢癌幸存者带来了新的挑战。本研究旨在评估大流行带来的心理困扰和医疗保健的改变。
联系我院的晚期卵巢癌幸存者参与一项基于电话的横断面定量调查研究,评估与大流行相关的心理困扰。使用经过验证的测量方法探讨心理领域:健康相关生活质量(HRQOL;癌症治疗功能评估[FACT-G7])、焦虑(广泛性焦虑障碍 7 项[GAD7])、抑郁(患者健康问卷 2[PHQ2])、全球健康患者报告结局测量信息系统-全球身体健康/全球心理健康(PROMIS-GMH/GPH)、韧性(简短韧性量表)和孤独感(英国老龄化纵向研究)。从我们部门开发的更大规模调查中抽取了与 COVID-19 大流行相关的新问题。
联系的 104 名患者中有 59%(61 名)完成了调查。四分之一的受访者韧性较高,只有 10%的受访者韧性较低。只有一名患者筛查出患有抑郁症,两名患者筛查出患有焦虑症。43%的受访者报告孤独感增加。患者的整体 HRQOL 良好(中位数=21;范围=6-28)。只有少数患者经历了治疗延迟,只有 4 名患者经历了化疗中断,2 名患者报告了手术延迟。多元回归分析表明,FACT-G7 较高的 HRQOL 与年龄>65 岁、自我报告的心理健康状况较高、韧性较高以及化疗结束有关。较低的 COVID-19 关注度与癌症复发和较高的韧性有关。
尽管 COVID-19 大流行的影响深远,但卵巢癌幸存者的 HRQOL 保持不变。年龄较大、韧性较高、心理健康状况较好以及化疗结束预测 HRQOL 更好。卵巢癌幸存者在大流行面前保持韧性,临床医生支持保持这一宝贵的个人资源对于健康至关重要。