Brandberg Y, Månsson-Brahme E, Ringborg U, Sjödén P O
Psychosocial Unit, Radiumhemmet, Karolinska Hospital, Stockholm, Sweden.
Eur J Cancer. 1995;31A(2):157-62. doi: 10.1016/0959-8049(94)00333-z.
Psychological and psychosomatic reactions to malignant melanoma were studied, comparing patients with tumour thickness < or = 0.8 mm versus > 0.8 mm and recurrent versus non-recurrent patients. Gender differences were also studied. Consecutive melanoma patients, Stage I (n = 144), were interviewed at their first postsurgery follow-up visit to an oncology clinic and completed questionnaires 7 and 13 months later. The questionnaire contained items regarding interest in nevi, sleeping problems, psychosomatic complaints, and the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Patients with a more unfavourable prognosis (tumour thickness > 0.8 mm), subjected to regular medical procedures, did not differ from those with a more favourable prognosis (< or = 0.8 mm), except reporting more sleeping problems. Women had considerably higher levels of problems than men. Amongst patients with an unfavourable prognosis, those with recurrence within 2 years showed lower levels of anxiety at the first visit compared with those free from recurrence after 2 years.