Fisher Hannah M, Taub Chloe J, Lechner Suzanne C, Antoni Michael H
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Department of Psychology, University of Miami, Coral Gables, FL, USA.
Eur J Health Psychol. 2021 Oct;28(4):171-182. doi: 10.1027/2512-8442/a000084. Epub 2021 Jun 14.
Depressed affect is observed during primary treatment for early-stage breast cancer and often persists into survivorship. Pain can influence the long-term emotions of women with breast cancer. Behavioral mechanisms explaining this relationship are less clear. Coping during primary treatment may play a role in the association between pain and depressed affect.
Our observational study examined a longitudinal mediation model testing whether post-surgical pain intensity predicted depressed affect 5 years later via disengagement and/or engagement coping at the end of treatment.
Women ( = 240) with stage 0-III breast cancer completed measures of pain, coping, and depressed affect 4-10 weeks post-surgery, and 12 months and 5 years later.
Structural modeling yielded measurement models of 12-month disengagement and engagement coping. Direct effects emerged between post-surgical pain intensity and 12-month disengagement (β = .37, < .001) and engagement coping (β = .16, < .05). Post-surgical pain intensity was also related to 5-year depressed affect (β = .25, < .05). Disengagement and engagement coping were not associated with depressed affect at 5-year follow-up, and there was no evidence of mediation.
This is a secondary analysis of data from a trial conducted several years ago, and may not generalize due to a homogenous sample with attrition at long-term follow-up.
Greater post-surgical pain intensity predicts more disengagement and engagement coping at the end of primary treatment, as well as depressed affect during survivorship. Managing post-surgical pain may influence the emotions of survivors of breast cancer up to 5 years later, possibly through coping or non-coping processes.
在早期乳腺癌的初始治疗期间可观察到抑郁情绪,且这种情绪常持续至癌症存活期。疼痛会影响乳腺癌女性的长期情绪。解释这种关系的行为机制尚不清楚。初始治疗期间的应对方式可能在疼痛与抑郁情绪之间的关联中起作用。
我们的观察性研究检验了一个纵向中介模型,以测试术后疼痛强度是否通过治疗结束时的脱离应对和/或参与应对来预测5年后的抑郁情绪。
240名0-III期乳腺癌女性在术后4-10周、12个月和5年后完成了疼痛、应对方式和抑郁情绪的测量。
结构模型得出了12个月时脱离应对和参与应对的测量模型。术后疼痛强度与12个月时的脱离应对(β = 0.37,P < 0.001)和参与应对(β = 0.16,P < 0.05)之间存在直接效应。术后疼痛强度也与5年时的抑郁情绪相关(β = 0.25,P < 0.05)。在5年随访时,脱离应对和参与应对与抑郁情绪无关,且没有中介效应的证据。
这是对几年前一项试验数据的二次分析,由于样本同质性以及长期随访中的样本流失,可能无法推广。
术后疼痛强度越大,预示着初始治疗结束时更多的脱离应对和参与应对,以及存活期的抑郁情绪。控制术后疼痛可能会影响乳腺癌幸存者长达5年的情绪,可能是通过应对或非应对过程。