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Breast cancer survivors' recollection of their illness and therapy seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial

Breast cancer survivors' recollection of their illness and therapy seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial
Breast cancer survivors' recollection of their illness and therapy seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the subjective experience of breast cancer survivors after primary treatment. However, these experiences are important because they shape their communication about their illness in everyday life, usage and acceptance of healthcare, and expectations of new generations of patients. The present study investigated this topic by combining qualitative and quantitative methods.

METHODS: Breast cancer survivors in Bavaria, Germany were mailed a questionnaire up to seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial and start of their therapy. This enquired about their worst experiences during the breast cancer episode, positive aspects of the illness and any advice they would give to newly diagnosed patients. A category system for themes was systematically created and answers were categorised by two independent raters. Frequencies of key categories were then quantitatively analysed using descriptive statistics. In addition, local treating physicians gave their opinion on the response categories chosen by their patients.

RESULTS: 133 (80%) of 166 eligible patients who survived up to seven years returned the questionnaire. The most prominent worst experience reported by survivors was psychological distress (i.e. anxiety, uncertainty; prevalence 38%) followed by chemotherapy (25%), and cancer diagnosis (18%). Positive aspects of the illness were reported by 48% with the most frequent including change in life priorities (50%) and social support (22%). The most frequent advice survivors gave was fighting spirit (i.e. think positive, never give up; prevalence 42%). Overall, physicians' estimates of the frequency of these responses corresponded well with survivors' answers.

CONCLUSIONS: Although physicians' understanding of breast cancer patients was good, psychological distress and chemotherapy-related side effects were remembered as particularly burdensome by a substantial part of survivors. On the one hand, patients' quality of life needs to be assessed repeatedly during medical follow-up to identify such specific complaints also including specific recommendations to the physician for targeted psychosocial and medical support. On the other hand the advices and positive aspects of the disease, reported by the survivors, can be used to promote positive ways of coping with the illness.

Aged, Breast Neoplasms, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Female, Germany, Humans, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Stress, Psychological, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survivors, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't
1471-2407
554
Lindberg, Patricia
417e2155-aac6-4c63-a5bd-5982d8c4f365
Koller, Michael
2891d207-c057-42d4-b9b5-9de86ded21b4
Steinger, Brunhilde
589dc65a-2550-4b5e-b7af-4d3587d2a0de
Lorenz, Wilfried
27ab0194-c552-4cae-9a60-f089ea29e8bd
Wyatt, Jeremy C
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Inwald, Elisabeth C.
ebfa7622-7a7c-4f24-b066-6118ce5e17cb
Klinkhammer-Schalke, Monika
8d4f0128-89bc-4256-83d0-6a4a12330902
Lindberg, Patricia
417e2155-aac6-4c63-a5bd-5982d8c4f365
Koller, Michael
2891d207-c057-42d4-b9b5-9de86ded21b4
Steinger, Brunhilde
589dc65a-2550-4b5e-b7af-4d3587d2a0de
Lorenz, Wilfried
27ab0194-c552-4cae-9a60-f089ea29e8bd
Wyatt, Jeremy C
8361be5a-fca9-4acf-b3d2-7ce04126f468
Inwald, Elisabeth C.
ebfa7622-7a7c-4f24-b066-6118ce5e17cb
Klinkhammer-Schalke, Monika
8d4f0128-89bc-4256-83d0-6a4a12330902

Lindberg, Patricia, Koller, Michael, Steinger, Brunhilde, Lorenz, Wilfried, Wyatt, Jeremy C, Inwald, Elisabeth C. and Klinkhammer-Schalke, Monika (2015) Breast cancer survivors' recollection of their illness and therapy seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial. BMC cancer, 15, 554. (doi:10.1186/s12885-015-1573-6).

Record type: Article

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known about the subjective experience of breast cancer survivors after primary treatment. However, these experiences are important because they shape their communication about their illness in everyday life, usage and acceptance of healthcare, and expectations of new generations of patients. The present study investigated this topic by combining qualitative and quantitative methods.

METHODS: Breast cancer survivors in Bavaria, Germany were mailed a questionnaire up to seven years after enrolment into a randomised controlled clinical trial and start of their therapy. This enquired about their worst experiences during the breast cancer episode, positive aspects of the illness and any advice they would give to newly diagnosed patients. A category system for themes was systematically created and answers were categorised by two independent raters. Frequencies of key categories were then quantitatively analysed using descriptive statistics. In addition, local treating physicians gave their opinion on the response categories chosen by their patients.

RESULTS: 133 (80%) of 166 eligible patients who survived up to seven years returned the questionnaire. The most prominent worst experience reported by survivors was psychological distress (i.e. anxiety, uncertainty; prevalence 38%) followed by chemotherapy (25%), and cancer diagnosis (18%). Positive aspects of the illness were reported by 48% with the most frequent including change in life priorities (50%) and social support (22%). The most frequent advice survivors gave was fighting spirit (i.e. think positive, never give up; prevalence 42%). Overall, physicians' estimates of the frequency of these responses corresponded well with survivors' answers.

CONCLUSIONS: Although physicians' understanding of breast cancer patients was good, psychological distress and chemotherapy-related side effects were remembered as particularly burdensome by a substantial part of survivors. On the one hand, patients' quality of life needs to be assessed repeatedly during medical follow-up to identify such specific complaints also including specific recommendations to the physician for targeted psychosocial and medical support. On the other hand the advices and positive aspects of the disease, reported by the survivors, can be used to promote positive ways of coping with the illness.

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More information

Published date: 29 July 2015
Keywords: Aged, Breast Neoplasms, Cross-Sectional Studies, Drug-Related Side Effects and Adverse Reactions, Female, Germany, Humans, Middle Aged, Quality of Life, Randomized Controlled Trials as Topic, Stress, Psychological, Surveys and Questionnaires, Survivors, Journal Article, Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 414065
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/414065
ISSN: 1471-2407
PURE UUID: c0a3acd4-5186-47a6-b654-1ec547f30c9c
ORCID for Jeremy C Wyatt: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-7008-1473

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Date deposited: 13 Sep 2017 16:31
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 04:23

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Contributors

Author: Patricia Lindberg
Author: Michael Koller
Author: Brunhilde Steinger
Author: Wilfried Lorenz
Author: Jeremy C Wyatt ORCID iD
Author: Elisabeth C. Inwald
Author: Monika Klinkhammer-Schalke

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