Stability of health-related quality of life and morbidity burden from 18 months after diagnosis of prostate cancer:: Results of a UK-wide population-based outcomes cohort
Stability of health-related quality of life and morbidity burden from 18 months after diagnosis of prostate cancer:: Results of a UK-wide population-based outcomes cohort
Objective: To evaluate the dynamic nature of self-reported health-related quality of life (HRQL) and morbidity burden in men diagnosed with prostate cancer, we performed a follow-up study of the Life After Prostate Cancer Diagnosis (LAPCD) study cohort 12 months after initial survey.
Methods: The LAPCD study collected information from 35,823 men across the UK who were 18-42 months post-diagnosis of prostate cancer. Men who were still alive 12 months later were resurveyed. Generic HRQL (EQ-5D-5L plus self-assessed health rating) and prostate cancer-specific outcomes (EPIC-26) were assessed. Treatment(s) received was self-reported. Previously defined clinically meaningful differences were used to evaluate changes in outcomes over time.
Results: A total of 28,450 men across all disease stages completed follow-up surveys (85.8% response). Of the 21,700 included in this study, 89.7% reported no additional treatments since the first survey. This group experienced stable urinary and bowel outcomes, with good function for most men at both time points. On-going poor (but stable) urinary issues were associated with previous surgery. Sexual function scores remained low (mean: 26.8/100). Self-assessed health ratings were stable over time. The largest declines in HRQL and functional outcomes were experienced by men reporting their first active treatment between surveys.
Discussion: The results suggest stability of HRQL and most specific morbidities by 18-42 months for men who report no further treatment in the subsequent 12 months. This is reassuring for those with good function and HRQL but re-enforces the need for early intervention and support for men who experience poor outcomes.
Keywords: Functional outcom
3151–3164
Mason, Samantha J
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Downing, Amy
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Wilding, Sarah
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Hounsome, Luke
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Wright, Penny
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Watson, Eila
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Wagland, Richard
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Butcher, Hugh
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Kind, Paul
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Selby, Peter
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Gavin, Anna
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Glaser, Adam
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1 April 2022
Mason, Samantha J
90e80e9f-38cb-4e0b-b1d7-8ced28a47cc4
Downing, Amy
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Wilding, Sarah
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Hounsome, Luke
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Wright, Penny
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Watson, Eila
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Wagland, Richard
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Butcher, Hugh
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Kind, Paul
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Selby, Peter
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Gavin, Anna
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Glaser, Adam
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Mason, Samantha J, Downing, Amy, Wilding, Sarah, Hounsome, Luke, Wright, Penny, Watson, Eila, Wagland, Richard, Butcher, Hugh, Kind, Paul, Selby, Peter, Gavin, Anna and Glaser, Adam
(2022)
Stability of health-related quality of life and morbidity burden from 18 months after diagnosis of prostate cancer:: Results of a UK-wide population-based outcomes cohort.
Supportive Care in Cancer, 30 (4), .
(doi:10.1007/s00520-021-06650-7).
Abstract
Objective: To evaluate the dynamic nature of self-reported health-related quality of life (HRQL) and morbidity burden in men diagnosed with prostate cancer, we performed a follow-up study of the Life After Prostate Cancer Diagnosis (LAPCD) study cohort 12 months after initial survey.
Methods: The LAPCD study collected information from 35,823 men across the UK who were 18-42 months post-diagnosis of prostate cancer. Men who were still alive 12 months later were resurveyed. Generic HRQL (EQ-5D-5L plus self-assessed health rating) and prostate cancer-specific outcomes (EPIC-26) were assessed. Treatment(s) received was self-reported. Previously defined clinically meaningful differences were used to evaluate changes in outcomes over time.
Results: A total of 28,450 men across all disease stages completed follow-up surveys (85.8% response). Of the 21,700 included in this study, 89.7% reported no additional treatments since the first survey. This group experienced stable urinary and bowel outcomes, with good function for most men at both time points. On-going poor (but stable) urinary issues were associated with previous surgery. Sexual function scores remained low (mean: 26.8/100). Self-assessed health ratings were stable over time. The largest declines in HRQL and functional outcomes were experienced by men reporting their first active treatment between surveys.
Discussion: The results suggest stability of HRQL and most specific morbidities by 18-42 months for men who report no further treatment in the subsequent 12 months. This is reassuring for those with good function and HRQL but re-enforces the need for early intervention and support for men who experience poor outcomes.
Keywords: Functional outcom
Text
Stability of health-related quality of life and morbidity burden from 18 months after diagnosis of prostate cancer
- Accepted Manuscript
Text
s00520-021-06650-7
- Version of Record
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Accepted/In Press date: 25 October 2021
e-pub ahead of print date: 13 November 2021
Published date: 1 April 2022
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Local EPrints ID: 452746
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/452746
ISSN: 0941-4355
PURE UUID: 9b386f6f-98f3-4b1d-b038-94d864a5bbb1
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Date deposited: 17 Dec 2021 18:17
Last modified: 17 Mar 2024 03:20
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Author:
Samantha J Mason
Author:
Amy Downing
Author:
Sarah Wilding
Author:
Luke Hounsome
Author:
Penny Wright
Author:
Eila Watson
Author:
Hugh Butcher
Author:
Paul Kind
Author:
Peter Selby
Author:
Anna Gavin
Author:
Adam Glaser
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