Langford Lewis, Latchford Gary, Mulvey Matt
Clinical Neuropsychology, Salford Royal Hospital, Salford, M6 8HD, UK.
Institute of Health Sciences, University of Leeds, Leeds, UK.
J Cancer Surviv. 2025 Jun;19(3):1080-1089. doi: 10.1007/s11764-024-01533-2. Epub 2024 Jan 29.
Chronic pain is a recognised long-term consequence associated with breast cancer and its treatment; however, it is often underdiagnosed and undertreated. This study aims to explore the associations between illness representations, chronic cancer pain, and HRQoL in women who have survived breast cancer.
A cross-sectional online survey design was used. Data from 182 women who participated in the survey were analysed.
Chronic cancer pain was reported by 66% of respondents. Using the BPI-SF (score 0-10), participants were categorised into one of four pain categories: no chronic pain (BPI score 0; 34.1%), mild pain (BPI score 1-3; 35.7%), moderate pain (BPI score 4-6; 25.3%), and severe pain (BPI score 7 + ; 4.9%). The main findings were that having a strong illness identity (IPQ-R subscale which assesses the number of symptoms an individual attributes to their illness) was found to be a significant predictor of pain severity (OR 1.21 (95% CI 1.07-1.37), p = 0.003). Furthermore, HRQoL was significantly associated and predictive of pain severity (OR 0.97 (95% CI 0.95-0.99), p < 0.001). An additional finding was that not being in paid work was strongly associated with being in a higher pain category (OR 5.92 (95% CI 1.84-19.05), p = 0.003).
The findings of this study highlight the high prevalence of chronic cancer pain experienced by this population. Results show that dimensions of illness representations are associated with chronic cancer pain experienced by breast cancer survivors. Furthermore, having a strong illness identity and HRQoL were found to be independent, significant predictors of pain severity.
These findings demonstrate that chronic pain is an unmet clinical need experienced by breast cancer survivors, which is associated with reduced overall HRQoL. Therefore, consideration is needed regarding the assessment and management of chronic pain experienced by this population.
慢性疼痛是乳腺癌及其治疗后公认的长期后果;然而,它常常未得到充分诊断和治疗。本研究旨在探讨乳腺癌幸存者的疾病认知、慢性癌痛与健康相关生活质量(HRQoL)之间的关联。
采用横断面在线调查设计。对参与调查的182名女性的数据进行了分析。
66%的受访者报告有慢性癌痛。使用简明疼痛量表(BPI-SF,评分0 - 10),参与者被分为四类疼痛类别之一:无慢性疼痛(BPI评分0;34.1%)、轻度疼痛(BPI评分1 - 3;35.7%)、中度疼痛(BPI评分4 - 6;25.3%)和重度疼痛(BPI评分7及以上;4.9%)。主要研究结果是,具有强烈的疾病认同(IPQ-R分量表,评估个体归因于其疾病的症状数量)被发现是疼痛严重程度的显著预测因素(比值比1.21(95%置信区间1.07 - 1.37),p = 0.003)。此外,HRQoL与疼痛严重程度显著相关且具有预测性(比值比0.97(95%置信区间0.95 - 0.99),p < 0.001)。另一个发现是,没有带薪工作与处于更高疼痛类别密切相关(比值比5.92(95%置信区间1.84 - 19.05),p = 0.003)。
本研究结果凸显了该人群中慢性癌痛的高患病率。结果表明,疾病认知维度与乳腺癌幸存者经历的慢性癌痛相关。此外,具有强烈的疾病认同和HRQoL被发现是疼痛严重程度的独立、显著预测因素。
这些发现表明,慢性疼痛是乳腺癌幸存者未得到满足的临床需求,这与整体HRQoL降低相关。因此,需要考虑对该人群经历的慢性疼痛进行评估和管理。