4.7 Article

Surviving recurrence: Psychological and quality-of-life recovery

Journal

CANCER
Volume 112, Issue 5, Pages 1178-1187

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.23272

Keywords

breast; cancer; recurrence; psychological stress; distress; quality of life; functional status; longitudinal

Categories

Funding

  1. NCI NIH HHS [P30 CA016058, R01 CA092704, K05 CA098133, P30 CA016058-339029, K05 CA 098133, K05 CA098133-05, K05 CA098133-04, R01 CA092704-07, P30 CA 16058, R01 CA 92704, R01 CA092704-08] Funding Source: Medline
  2. NIMH NIH HHS [R01 MH 51487, R01 MH051487, R01 MH051487-05] Funding Source: Medline

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BACKGROUND. To the authors' knowledge, data characterizing patients' psychosocial experiences after a recurrence diagnosis are limited. This report provides the physical, psychological, and quality-of-life trajectories of patients with recurrent breast cancer. In addition, patients with a well-documented trajectory-patients with their initial diagnosis of breast cancer-were included as a referent group, providing a metric against which to gauge the impact and course of cancer recurrence. METHODS. Patients with a newly diagnosed, recurrent (n = 69) or initial (n = 113) breast cancer were accrued. The groups did not differ with regard to age, race, education, family income, or partner status (all P values >.18). All patients were assessed shortly after diagnosis (baseline) and 4 months, 8 months, and 12 months later. Mixed-effects models were used to determine health status, stress, mood, and quality-of-life trajectories. RESULTS. in the year after a recurrence diagnosis, patients' physical health and functioning showed no improvement, whereas quality of life and mood generally improved, and stress declined. Compared with patients who were coping with their first diagnosis, patients with recurrence had significantly lower anxiety and confusion. In contrast, physical functioning was poorer among recurrence patients, quality-of-life improvement was slower, and cancer-related distress was high as that of the initially diagnosed patient. Slower quality-of-life recovery was most apparent among younger patients (aged <54 years). CONCLUSIONS. Despite the physical burden, patients with recurrent breast cancer exhibit considerable resilience, with steady improvements in psychological adjustment and quality of life during the year after diagnosis. Management of patients' physical symptoms is particularly important, because patients cope with recurrent breast cancer as a chronic illness.

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