4.6 Article

Patient-reported distress in Hodgkin lymphoma across the survivorship continuum

Journal

SUPPORTIVE CARE IN CANCER
Volume 27, Issue 7, Pages 2453-2462

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00520-018-4523-4

Keywords

Hematologic neoplasms; Hodgkin lymphoma; Patient-reported outcome measures; Psychological distress; Quality of life

Funding

  1. Seattle Genetics, Inc., Seattle, WA

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PurposeHodgkin lymphoma (HL) survivors face long-term, elevated risk of treatment-related sequelae, including psychosocial distress associated with poor health outcomes. The magnitude and sources of distress are not well described in the routine care of HL outside of clinical trials.MethodsWe conducted a retrospective cohort study of patients visiting a tertiary-care center for treatment or long-term follow-up of HL. Patient-reported distress was documented using the National Comprehensive Cancer Network Distress Thermometer (DT) and Problem List. Three survivor groups were compared using descriptive methods: on treatment, surviving <5years, and surviving 5years since diagnosis.ResultsA total of 1524 DT were abstracted for 304 patients (106 on treatment, 77 surviving <5years, and 121 surviving 5years). Distress was low overall (median DT=1, inter-quartile range 0-4) and was similar across survivor groups. However, actionable distress (score4) was reported at 29.5% of clinical encounters. Patients on treatment more frequently reported actionable distress (32.5% of visits) compared with patients surviving <5years (20.4%) and 5years (28.7%) (P=0.065). Distress was associated primarily with physical and emotional problems, especially fatigue, worry, and sleep. We did not observe any associations between distress and clinical prognostic factors.ConclusionsDistress burden is low in HL, but survivorship is marked by periods of actionable distress, largely related to physical symptoms and emotional issues. This burden may be higher when on treatment and is unrelated to disease-related prognostic factors. Survivorship research typically focuses on the post-therapy period, but our results support testing the efficacy of interventions to address distress in HL during active treatment as well.

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