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Pre-surgery depression and confidence to manage problems predict recovery trajectories of health and wellbeing in the first two years following colorectal cancer: results from the CREW cohort study

Pre-surgery depression and confidence to manage problems predict recovery trajectories of health and wellbeing in the first two years following colorectal cancer: results from the CREW cohort study
Pre-surgery depression and confidence to manage problems predict recovery trajectories of health and wellbeing in the first two years following colorectal cancer: results from the CREW cohort study
Purpose: This paper identifies predictors of recovery trajectories of quality of life (QoL), health status and personal wellbeing in the two years following colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods: 872 adults receiving curative intent surgery during November 2010 to March 2012. Questionnaires at baseline, 3, 9, 15, 24 months post-surgery assessed QoL, health status, wellbeing, confidence to manage illness-related problems (self-efficacy), social support, co-morbidities, socio-demographic, clinical and treatment characteristics. Group-based trajectory analyses identified distinct trajectories and predictors for QoL, health status and wellbeing.

Results: Four recovery trajectories were identified for each outcome. Groups 1 and 2 fared consistently well (scores above/within normal range); 70.5% of participants for QoL, 33.3% health status, 77.6% wellbeing. Group 3 had some problems (24.2% QoL, 59.3% health, 18.2% wellbeing); Group 4 fared consistently poorly (5.3% QoL, 7.4% health, 4.2% wellbeing). Higher pre-surgery depression and lower self-efficacy were significantly associated with poorer trajectories for all three outcomes after adjusting for other important predictors including disease characteristics, stoma, anxiety and social support.

Conclusions: Psychosocial factors including self-efficacy and depression before surgery predict recovery trajectories in QoL, health status and wellbeing following colorectal cancer treatment independent of treatment or disease characteristics. This has significant implications for colorectal cancer management as appropriate support may be improved by early intervention resulting in more positive recovery experiences.
1932-6203
Foster, Claire
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Haviland, Joanne
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Winter, Jane
05cb0a58-cc4f-471c-a268-c1d97de9719e
Grimmett, Chloe
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Chivers Seymour, Kim
68f3b1b4-9930-474e-ab6c-f769215046e7
Batehup, Lynn
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Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Corner, Jessica
eddc9d69-aa12-4de5-8ab0-b20a6b5765fa
Din, Amy
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Fenlon, Deborah
52f9a9f1-1643-449c-9856-258ef563342c
May, Christine M.
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Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Smith, Peter W.
961a01a3-bf4c-43ca-9599-5be4fd5d3940
Members of Study Advisory Committee
Foster, Claire
00786ac1-bd47-4aeb-a0e2-40e058695b73
Haviland, Joanne
f9f6f28e-cff0-4564-9127-3422a794f0bf
Winter, Jane
05cb0a58-cc4f-471c-a268-c1d97de9719e
Grimmett, Chloe
7f27e85b-2850-481d-a7dd-2835e1a925cd
Chivers Seymour, Kim
68f3b1b4-9930-474e-ab6c-f769215046e7
Batehup, Lynn
8e1e1784-d152-4c0e-93d3-f95de39fa25c
Calman, Lynn
9ae254eb-74a7-4906-9eb4-62ad99f058c1
Corner, Jessica
eddc9d69-aa12-4de5-8ab0-b20a6b5765fa
Din, Amy
4ca3c758-ec41-4c76-baf6-95ad788f5336
Fenlon, Deborah
52f9a9f1-1643-449c-9856-258ef563342c
May, Christine M.
c4fc85dc-7297-4bd7-9f50-13922618f7c5
Richardson, Alison
3db30680-aa47-43a5-b54d-62d10ece17b7
Smith, Peter W.
961a01a3-bf4c-43ca-9599-5be4fd5d3940

Foster, Claire, Haviland, Joanne, Winter, Jane, Grimmett, Chloe, Chivers Seymour, Kim, Batehup, Lynn, Calman, Lynn, Corner, Jessica, Din, Amy, Fenlon, Deborah, May, Christine M., Richardson, Alison and Smith, Peter W. , Members of Study Advisory Committee (2016) Pre-surgery depression and confidence to manage problems predict recovery trajectories of health and wellbeing in the first two years following colorectal cancer: results from the CREW cohort study. PLoS ONE, 11 (5), [e0155434]. (doi:10.1371/journal.pone.0155434).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Purpose: This paper identifies predictors of recovery trajectories of quality of life (QoL), health status and personal wellbeing in the two years following colorectal cancer surgery.

Methods: 872 adults receiving curative intent surgery during November 2010 to March 2012. Questionnaires at baseline, 3, 9, 15, 24 months post-surgery assessed QoL, health status, wellbeing, confidence to manage illness-related problems (self-efficacy), social support, co-morbidities, socio-demographic, clinical and treatment characteristics. Group-based trajectory analyses identified distinct trajectories and predictors for QoL, health status and wellbeing.

Results: Four recovery trajectories were identified for each outcome. Groups 1 and 2 fared consistently well (scores above/within normal range); 70.5% of participants for QoL, 33.3% health status, 77.6% wellbeing. Group 3 had some problems (24.2% QoL, 59.3% health, 18.2% wellbeing); Group 4 fared consistently poorly (5.3% QoL, 7.4% health, 4.2% wellbeing). Higher pre-surgery depression and lower self-efficacy were significantly associated with poorer trajectories for all three outcomes after adjusting for other important predictors including disease characteristics, stoma, anxiety and social support.

Conclusions: Psychosocial factors including self-efficacy and depression before surgery predict recovery trajectories in QoL, health status and wellbeing following colorectal cancer treatment independent of treatment or disease characteristics. This has significant implications for colorectal cancer management as appropriate support may be improved by early intervention resulting in more positive recovery experiences.

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Accepted/In Press date: 28 April 2016
e-pub ahead of print date: 12 May 2016
Published date: 12 May 2016
Organisations: Faculty of Health Sciences

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Local EPrints ID: 399613
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/399613
ISSN: 1932-6203
PURE UUID: 2a0662c9-89df-45cd-bced-a5628fd5d512
ORCID for Claire Foster: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4703-8378
ORCID for Chloe Grimmett: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-7540-7206
ORCID for Lynn Calman: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-9964-6017
ORCID for Alison Richardson: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-3127-5755
ORCID for Peter W. Smith: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4423-5410

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Date deposited: 22 Aug 2016 10:46
Last modified: 15 Mar 2024 03:43

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Contributors

Author: Claire Foster ORCID iD
Author: Joanne Haviland
Author: Jane Winter
Author: Chloe Grimmett ORCID iD
Author: Kim Chivers Seymour
Author: Lynn Batehup
Author: Lynn Calman ORCID iD
Author: Jessica Corner
Author: Amy Din
Author: Deborah Fenlon
Author: Christine M. May
Author: Peter W. Smith ORCID iD
Corporate Author: Members of Study Advisory Committee

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