Di Palmo Michaela, Secinti Ekin, Krueger Ellen, Hanna Nasser H, Adra Nabil, Durm Gregory A, Einhorn Lawrence, Pili Roberto, Jalal Shadia I, Mosher Catherine E
Department of Psychology (M.D.P, E.S., E.K., C.E.M.), Indiana University Indianapolis, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
Department of Medicine (N.H.H., N.A., G.A.D., L.E., S.I.J.), Indiana University School of Medicine, Indianapolis, Indiana, USA; Indiana University Melvin and Bren Simon Comprehensive Cancer Center (N.H.H., N.A., G.A.D., L.E., S.I.J.), Indianapolis, Indiana, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2025 Apr;69(4):393-401. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2024.12.024. Epub 2025 Jan 6.
While prognostic awareness has been commonly assessed as perceived illness terminality in patients with advanced cancer, both perceptions of illness severity and terminality may be correlated with symptom burden and quality of life.
The present study examined physical and psychological symptoms, quality of life, and smoking status in relation to perceived illness severity and terminality in patients with advanced, inoperable lung and prostate cancer.
Patients (N=198) were recruited from hospitals in the midwestern U.S. to complete a one-time survey. Prognostic awareness was assessed in the following categories: "relatively healthy," "seriously ill but not terminally ill," or "seriously and terminally ill."
Only 12% reported an accurate prognostic awareness ("seriously and terminally ill") and 66% perceived themselves as "relatively healthy." Higher levels of anxiety, depressive symptoms, fatigue, and pain and worse quality of life were associated with a higher likelihood of reporting serious illness, irrespective of perceived illness terminality. Smoking status was unrelated to prognostic awareness. For patients with advanced lung cancer, greater breathlessness was associated with a higher likelihood of reporting serious or terminal illness.
Our findings suggest that perceiving cancer as serious, not just terminal, is related to symptom burden and quality of life. Results point to the need for interventions to improve prognostic understanding and coping with the disease.
虽然在晚期癌症患者中,预后意识通常被评估为对疾病终末期的感知,但对疾病严重程度和终末期的感知都可能与症状负担和生活质量相关。
本研究调查了晚期不可手术的肺癌和前列腺癌患者的身体和心理症状、生活质量以及吸烟状况与所感知的疾病严重程度和终末期之间的关系。
从美国中西部的医院招募了198名患者,以完成一次性调查。预后意识通过以下类别进行评估:“相对健康”、“重病但非绝症”或“重病且为绝症”。
只有12%的患者报告有准确的预后意识(“重病且为绝症”),66%的患者认为自己“相对健康”。无论对疾病终末期的感知如何,焦虑、抑郁症状、疲劳和疼痛程度较高以及生活质量较差与报告重病的可能性较高相关。吸烟状况与预后意识无关。对于晚期肺癌患者,呼吸急促加剧与报告重病或绝症的可能性较高相关。
我们的研究结果表明,将癌症视为严重疾病,而不仅仅是绝症,与症状负担和生活质量相关。结果表明需要采取干预措施来提高对预后的理解并应对疾病。