Does adjuvant chemotherapy result in poorer health-related quality of life among colorectal cancer patients? A longitudinal multisite observational study in Singapore.
Jerrald Lau, Cherie Hui Peh, Alyssa Ng, Wei-Ling Koh, Nan Luo, Ker-Kan Tan
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: Research on health-related quality of life (HRQOL) using minimally important differences for cancer care in Asian settings are sparse. This study aimed to describe functional HRQOL trajectories among Colorectal Cancer (CRC) patients undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy (AC) compared to those who did not (No AC), evaluate if AC was associated with change in HRQOL prospectively, and examine QOL differences between elderly and non-elderly CRC patients requiring AC.
Methods: CRC patients diagnosed between February 2018 to August 2021 were recruited from three Singapore public hospitals. Participants completed the EORTC QLQ-C30 over seven timepoints (diagnosis, predischarge, 1-, 3-, 6-, 9-, 12-months post-surgery). Clinical characteristics were collected from electronic medical records.
Results: The sample comprised 251 participants (102 in AC group; 40.64%). Clinically relevant deteriorations in functional HRQOL were observed in both groups between baseline and predischarge. These returned to baseline by 12-month. AC was associated with poorer physical (β = -35.34, p < 0.05) and role functioning (β = -71.17, p < 0.05) over time. Being elderly was associated with poorer physical functioning (β = -0.44, p < 0.05) over time. However, the non-elderly AC subgroup tended to experience poorer HRQOL in general compared to elderly.
Conclusions: Functional recovery remains a challenge for CRC patients in general. However, non-elderly AC patients may experience more severe impacts to role and social functioning.
期刊介绍:
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes is an open access, peer-reviewed, journal offering high quality articles, rapid publication and wide diffusion in the public domain.
Health and Quality of Life Outcomes considers original manuscripts on the Health-Related Quality of Life (HRQOL) assessment for evaluation of medical and psychosocial interventions. It also considers approaches and studies on psychometric properties of HRQOL and patient reported outcome measures, including cultural validation of instruments if they provide information about the impact of interventions. The journal publishes study protocols and reviews summarising the present state of knowledge concerning a particular aspect of HRQOL and patient reported outcome measures. Reviews should generally follow systematic review methodology. Comments on articles and letters to the editor are welcome.