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The psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway for localised prostate cancer: a UK-wide mixed methods study

The psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway for localised prostate cancer: a UK-wide mixed methods study
The psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway for localised prostate cancer: a UK-wide mixed methods study
Objective: to address concerns over the psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway following prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis, this study compared the psychological status of men on active surveillance (AS) or watchful waiting (WW) with men on active treatment (AT), and explored psychological adjustment in men on AS/WW.

Methods: cross-sectional survey of UK men diagnosed with PCa 18-42 months previously (n=16,726, localised disease at diagnosis) and telephone interviews with 24 men on AS/WW. Psychological outcomes were measured using two validated scales (Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental-Well-being Scale; Kessler Psychological Distress Scale). Univariable and multivariable analyses compared outcomes between men on AS/WW and AT. Thematic analysis of interviews was undertaken, informed by a previously developed theory of adjustment to cancer.

Results: 3,986 (23.8%) respondents were on AS/WW. Overall, psychological outcomes were similar or better in men on AS/WW compared to those receiving AT (SWEMWBS: Poor well-being; 12.3% AS/WW vs 13.9% AT, adjusted OR=0.86, 95% CI 0.76-0.97; K6: severe psychological distress; 4.6% vs 5.4%, adjusted OR=0.90, 95% CI 0.74-1.08). Interviews indicated most men on AS/WW had adjusted positively. Men with poorer well-being were less able to accept, reframe positively and normalise the diagnosis, described receiving insufficient information and support, and a lack of confidence in their health-care professionals.

Conclusions: most men on AS/WW cope well psychologically. Men making treatment decisions should be given this information. Psychological health should be assessed to determine suitability for AS/WW, and at monitoring appointments. A clear action plan and support from healthcare professionals is important.
1057-9249
1567-1575
Matheson, Lauren
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Wilding, Sarah
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Wagland, Richard
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Nayoan, Johana
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Rivas, Carol
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Downing, Amy
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Wright, Penny
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Brett, Jo
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Kearney, Therese
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Cross, William
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Glaser, Adam
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Gavin, Anna
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Watson, Eila
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Matheson, Lauren
4e548e54-983a-4c9e-ae99-22423ffeb69c
Wilding, Sarah
a538ad99-f618-4022-9a21-cf063649f99d
Wagland, Richard
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Nayoan, Johana
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Rivas, Carol
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Downing, Amy
f4ff289d-68c6-466b-bbc4-f920e10506b5
Wright, Penny
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Brett, Jo
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Kearney, Therese
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Cross, William
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Glaser, Adam
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Gavin, Anna
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Watson, Eila
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Matheson, Lauren, Wilding, Sarah, Wagland, Richard, Nayoan, Johana, Rivas, Carol, Downing, Amy, Wright, Penny, Brett, Jo, Kearney, Therese, Cross, William, Glaser, Adam, Gavin, Anna and Watson, Eila (2019) The psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway for localised prostate cancer: a UK-wide mixed methods study. Psycho-Oncology, 28 (7), 1567-1575. (doi:10.1002/pon.5133).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objective: to address concerns over the psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway following prostate cancer (PCa) diagnosis, this study compared the psychological status of men on active surveillance (AS) or watchful waiting (WW) with men on active treatment (AT), and explored psychological adjustment in men on AS/WW.

Methods: cross-sectional survey of UK men diagnosed with PCa 18-42 months previously (n=16,726, localised disease at diagnosis) and telephone interviews with 24 men on AS/WW. Psychological outcomes were measured using two validated scales (Short Warwick-Edinburgh Mental-Well-being Scale; Kessler Psychological Distress Scale). Univariable and multivariable analyses compared outcomes between men on AS/WW and AT. Thematic analysis of interviews was undertaken, informed by a previously developed theory of adjustment to cancer.

Results: 3,986 (23.8%) respondents were on AS/WW. Overall, psychological outcomes were similar or better in men on AS/WW compared to those receiving AT (SWEMWBS: Poor well-being; 12.3% AS/WW vs 13.9% AT, adjusted OR=0.86, 95% CI 0.76-0.97; K6: severe psychological distress; 4.6% vs 5.4%, adjusted OR=0.90, 95% CI 0.74-1.08). Interviews indicated most men on AS/WW had adjusted positively. Men with poorer well-being were less able to accept, reframe positively and normalise the diagnosis, described receiving insufficient information and support, and a lack of confidence in their health-care professionals.

Conclusions: most men on AS/WW cope well psychologically. Men making treatment decisions should be given this information. Psychological health should be assessed to determine suitability for AS/WW, and at monitoring appointments. A clear action plan and support from healthcare professionals is important.

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The psychological impact of being on a monitoring pathway for localised prostate cancer: a UK-wide mixed methods study - Accepted Manuscript
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Accepted/In Press date: 19 May 2019
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 May 2019
Published date: July 2019

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 431237
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/431237
ISSN: 1057-9249
PURE UUID: ba098cbd-fe30-4cc9-a430-ffc8027a346b
ORCID for Richard Wagland: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-1825-7587

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Date deposited: 28 May 2019 16:30
Last modified: 16 Mar 2024 07:53

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Contributors

Author: Lauren Matheson
Author: Sarah Wilding
Author: Richard Wagland ORCID iD
Author: Johana Nayoan
Author: Carol Rivas
Author: Amy Downing
Author: Penny Wright
Author: Jo Brett
Author: Therese Kearney
Author: William Cross
Author: Adam Glaser
Author: Anna Gavin
Author: Eila Watson

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