Department of Surgery, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA, USA.
Int J Colorectal Dis. 2024 Aug 14;39(1):130. doi: 10.1007/s00384-024-04685-w.
Persistent gastrointestinal (GI) symptoms are frequently experienced by colon cancer survivors and may help identify patients with higher utilization of healthcare services. To assess the relationship between GI symptoms and specialty care utilization among colon cancer survivors.
A prospective longitudinal cohort study at an academic medical center of 126 adults surgically treated for stage I-IV colon cancer between February 2017 and June 2022. Participants reported GI symptoms through the EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-CR29 at enrollment and as frequently as every 6 months for 5 years. Main outcome measures were visits, telephone encounters, and secure messages with a medical provider within specialty oncology clinics within 6 months after each survey completion. Generalized linear mixed regression model for repeated measurements with random trajectory for each participant was performed to estimate the associations between symptoms and healthcare use. Models were adjusted for demographics, clinical and surgical factors, and timing in relation to onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.
In the 6 months after each survey time point, patients averaged 1.2 visits, 0.5 telephone encounters, and 3.2 patient-initiated messages. In adjusted models, those with any abdominal pain (RR 1.45; p = 0.002), buttock pain (RR 1.30; p = 0.050), or increased stool frequency (RR 1.26; p = 0.046) had more clinic visits in the following 6 months than those without these symptoms. Including these three symptoms in one model revealed that only abdominal pain was statistically significantly associated with increased clinic visits (RR 1.36; p = 0.016). Patients with any blood or mucus in stool (RR 2.46; p = 0.009) had significantly more telephone encounters, and those with any abdominal pain (RR 1.65; p = 0.002) had significantly more patient-initiated messages than those without these symptoms.
Our findings identify GI symptoms associated with increased use of oncologic specialty care among colon cancer survivors, with abdominal pain as an important predictor of utilization.
Early identification and anticipatory management of colon cancer survivors experiencing abdominal pain may decrease healthcare utilization.
结肠癌幸存者经常会出现持续性胃肠道(GI)症状,这些症状可能有助于识别那些对医疗服务利用率更高的患者。本研究旨在评估结肠癌幸存者的 GI 症状与专科医疗服务利用之间的关系。
这是一项在学术医疗中心进行的前瞻性纵向队列研究,纳入了 2017 年 2 月至 2022 年 6 月期间接受 I-IV 期结肠癌手术治疗的 126 名成年人。参与者在入组时以及之后每 6 个月通过 EORTC QLQ-C30 和 QLQ-CR29 报告 GI 症状。主要结局指标是在每次调查完成后 6 个月内,在肿瘤专科诊所与医疗提供者进行的就诊、电话就诊和安全信息交流次数。使用具有随机轨迹的重复测量广义线性混合回归模型来估计症状与医疗保健使用之间的关联。模型调整了人口统计学、临床和手术因素以及与 COVID-19 大流行开始时间的关系。
在每次调查时间点后的 6 个月内,患者平均就诊 1.2 次、电话就诊 0.5 次、发起患者信息 3.2 次。在调整后的模型中,与无任何腹痛(RR 1.45;p=0.002)、臀部疼痛(RR 1.30;p=0.050)或排便频率增加(RR 1.26;p=0.046)的患者相比,有这些症状的患者在接下来的 6 个月内就诊次数更多。在一个包含这三种症状的模型中,只有腹痛与就诊次数增加有统计学显著关联(RR 1.36;p=0.016)。有任何粪便带血或黏液(RR 2.46;p=0.009)的患者电话就诊次数明显更多,有任何腹痛(RR 1.65;p=0.002)的患者发起的患者信息明显更多。
本研究结果确定了与结肠癌幸存者专科医疗服务利用率增加相关的 GI 症状,其中腹痛是利用的重要预测因素。
早期识别和预期管理经历腹痛的结肠癌幸存者可能会降低医疗保健利用率。