College of Nursing, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Knoxville, Tennessee; Department of Surgery, Graduate School of Medicine, University of Tennessee Health Science Center, Knoxville, Tennessee.
College of Nursing, University of Tennessee, Knoxville, Knoxville, Tennessee.
J Pain. 2024 Jul;25(7):104491. doi: 10.1016/j.jpain.2024.02.005. Epub 2024 Feb 9.
Breast cancer patients experience treatment-related pain from surgery, radiation, chemotherapy, and long-term hormonal treatment, which can lead to poorer outcomes. Patient and family caregivers' psychosocial distress exacerbates patient pain interference, but this has not been directly examined among breast cancer patients in dyadic models longitudinally. Guided by a biopsychosocial framework, the Biobehavioral Family Model, we explore how multiple reports of patient pain interference across the first year of treatment are linked to the patient (N = 55) and caregiver (N = 55) pretreatment psychosocial distress (eg, depression, anxiety, marital satisfaction, family relationship quality). Specifically, we find that breast cancer patients' pain interference increases and then decreases over the first year of treatment. Additionally, caregivers' pretreatment anxiety was associated with increased patient pain interference over time (B = .19, SE = .07, P = .008), while patients' pretreatment psychosocial distress was not associated with a change in their pain interference. Yet, looking at clinically specific times during the first year of treatment, we find that caregiver-reported higher marital satisfaction is associated with lower patient-reported pain interference later in treatment (6 months: B = -.58, SE = .24, P = .017; 12 months: B = -.82, SE = .23, P < .001). We conclude that, per the Biobehavioral Family Model, pretreatment patient and caregiver psychosocial distress is linked to patient pain interference during the first year of breast cancer treatment. Thus, caregivers' psychosocial distress (ie, anxiety and marital satisfaction) may be a particularly important target in future dyadic behavioral intervention strategies to reduce breast cancer patient pain. PERSPECTIVE: This article presents the link between breast cancer patients and family caregiver pretreatment psychosocial distress (anxiety, depression, marital satisfaction, and family quality) on patient pain interference during 1 year of breast cancer treatment. Findings suggest that caregiver anxiety and marital satisfaction may be important targets for future dyadic behavioral pain interventions.
乳腺癌患者在手术、放疗、化疗和长期激素治疗过程中会经历与治疗相关的疼痛,这可能导致预后较差。患者及其家属的心理困扰会加剧患者的疼痛干扰,但这在纵向的二元模型中尚未直接在乳腺癌患者中进行检查。本研究以生物心理社会框架为指导,以生物行为家庭模型为基础,探讨了治疗第一年中患者多次报告的疼痛干扰与患者(N=55)和护理者(N=55)治疗前心理困扰(如抑郁、焦虑、婚姻满意度、家庭关系质量)之间的关系。具体来说,我们发现乳腺癌患者的疼痛干扰在治疗的第一年中先增加后减少。此外,护理者的治疗前焦虑与患者的疼痛干扰随时间的增加有关(B=0.19,SE=0.07,P=0.008),而患者的治疗前心理困扰与疼痛干扰的变化无关。然而,在治疗的第一年中观察到特定的临床时间,我们发现护理者报告的更高的婚姻满意度与治疗后期患者报告的更低的疼痛干扰有关(6 个月:B=-0.58,SE=0.24,P=0.017;12 个月:B=-0.82,SE=0.23,P<0.001)。我们得出的结论是,根据生物行为家庭模型,治疗前患者和护理者的心理困扰与乳腺癌患者治疗第一年的疼痛干扰有关。因此,护理者的心理困扰(即焦虑和婚姻满意度)可能是未来二元行为干预策略中减轻乳腺癌患者疼痛的一个重要目标。观点:本文介绍了乳腺癌患者及其家属在乳腺癌治疗 1 年内治疗前心理困扰(焦虑、抑郁、婚姻满意度和家庭质量)与患者疼痛干扰之间的关系。研究结果表明,护理者的焦虑和婚姻满意度可能是未来二元行为疼痛干预的重要目标。