4.7 Article

Area Deprivation Index is Associated with Variation in Quality of Life and Psychosocial Well-being Following Breast Cancer Surgery

Journal

ANNALS OF SURGICAL ONCOLOGY
Volume 30, Issue 1, Pages 80-87

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1245/s10434-022-12506-z

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This study found that breast cancer patients living in deprived neighborhoods have lower psychological well-being and quality of life. Therefore, the deprivation level of the neighborhood should be taken into consideration in preoperative counseling to provide value-based and personalized care, especially for vulnerable populations.
Background: Neighborhood-level factors have been shown to influence surgical outcomes through material deprivation, psychosocial mechanisms, health behaviors, and access to resources. To date, no study has examined the relationship between area-level deprivation (ADI) and post-mastectomy outcomes. Methods: A cross-sectional survey of adult female breast cancer patients who underwent lumpectomy or mastectomy between January 2018 to June 2019 was carried out. Patient-specific characteristics and ADI information were abstracted and correlated with postoperative global-(SF-12) and condition-specific (BREAST-Q) quality-of-life performance via multivariable regression. Patients were classified into three ADI terciles: 0-39 (low deprivation), 40-59 (moderate deprivation), and 60-100 (high deprivation). Results: A total of 564 consecutive patients were identified, being mostly white (75%) with mean age of 60.2 +/- 12.4 years, median body mass index of 27.8 [interquartile range (IQR) 24.3-32.2) kg/m(2), median Charlson Comorbidity Index of 3 (IQR 2-5), and mean ADI of 42.3 +/- 25.7. African American and Hispanic patients and those with high BMI were more likely to reside in highly deprived neighborhoods (p = 0.003 and p < 0.001). In adjusted models, patients in highly deprived neighborhoods had significantly lower mean SF-12 physical (44.9 [95% CI, 43.8-46.0] versus 44.9 [95% CI, 43.7-46.1] versus 46.3 [95% CI, 45.3-47.3], p = 0.03) and BREAST-Q psychosocial well-being scores (63.5 [95% CI, 59.32-67.8] versus 69.3 [95% CI, 65.1-73.6] versus 69.7 [95% CI, 66.4-73.1], p = 0.01) relative to moderate- and low-deprivation groups. Conclusions: Patients residing in the most deprived neighborhoods were identified to have worse psychological well-being and quality-of-life. The ADI should be incorporated into the shared decision-making process and perioperative counseling to engender value-based and personalized care, especially for vulnerable populations.

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