Comparative Effectiveness of Psychosocial Protective Factors for Prostate Cancer Survivorship - A UK Biobank Study.

IF 3.5 2区 医学 Q2 ONCOLOGY
Yan Yu, Olivia Miu Yung Ngan, Varut Vardhanabhuti, Xin-Yuan Guan, Fraide A Ganotice
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Abstract

Background: This study investigates psychosocial and lifestyle factors to improve survival outcomes in prostate cancer patients.

Methods: From the UK Biobank cohort, 13,110 male prostate cancer subjects were analysed to examine the relationship between psychosocial and lifestyle factors and survival with a mean follow-up of 14.2 years from recruitment.

Results: Participation in sports club or gym (HR = 0.82, 95% CI 0.74-0.91, p < 0.005), religious groups (HR = 0.83, 95% CI 0.73-0.94, p < 0.005) and other group activity (HR = 0.87, 95% CI 0.78-0.97, p = 0.01) were associated with lower mortality risk in our analysis, after adjusting for age, deprivation and comorbidities, followed by. In contrast, neither the pub or social club nor the adult education class demonstrated a statistically significant survival benefit. A modest dose-response relationship between the number of social activities engaged in and mortality risk reduction is observed. There were no differential benefits in alcohol intake, while smoking demonstrated a graded risk increase in mortality (HR = 1.74, 95% CI 1.51-2.0, p < 0.005 in current smokers; HR = 1.21, 95% CI 1.1-1.32, p < 0.005 in previous smokers) compared to never smokers. Having close and frequent confidants (HR = 0.83, 95% CI 0.75-0.92, p < 0.005 for daily) also confers benefits to survival.

Conclusions: This study demonstrates that participation in sports club or gym, engaging in religious groups and other group activities, forming good health habits such as smoking cessation, and having people to confide in regularly is associated with reduced mortality risk in prostate cancer patients. These findings highlight the importance of integrating psychosocial resilience, health behaviour optimisation, and spiritual engagement into survivorship care. The hierarchical risk reduction profile supports prioritising interventions targeting modifiable health behaviours, spiritual/social support, and group activities. While religious participation is associated with notable survival benefits, this study recognises the complex interplay of cultural, social, and personal factors influencing engagement in such activities. These findings advocate for stratified survivorship care models prioritising engagement modalities with dual physiological, psychosocial, and spiritual benefits.

心理社会保护因素对前列腺癌生存的比较效果——英国生物银行研究
背景:本研究探讨心理社会和生活方式因素对改善前列腺癌患者生存结局的影响。方法:从英国生物银行队列中,对13110名男性前列腺癌受试者进行分析,以检查心理社会和生活方式因素与生存率之间的关系,从招募开始平均随访14.2年。结果:参加体育俱乐部或健身房(HR = 0.82, 95% CI 0.74-0.91, p)结论:本研究表明,参加体育俱乐部或健身房、参加宗教团体和其他团体活动、养成戒烟等良好的健康习惯、有规律的倾诉对象与降低前列腺癌患者的死亡风险相关。这些发现强调了将心理社会复原力、健康行为优化和精神参与纳入幸存者护理的重要性。分级减少风险概况支持针对可改变的健康行为、精神/社会支持和团体活动的优先干预措施。虽然宗教参与与显著的生存效益有关,但本研究认识到影响此类活动参与的文化、社会和个人因素的复杂相互作用。这些发现提倡分层的幸存者护理模式,优先考虑具有双重生理、社会心理和精神效益的参与模式。
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来源期刊
Psycho‐Oncology
Psycho‐Oncology 医学-心理学
CiteScore
6.30
自引率
8.30%
发文量
220
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Psycho-Oncology is concerned with the psychological, social, behavioral, and ethical aspects of cancer. This subspeciality addresses the two major psychological dimensions of cancer: the psychological responses of patients to cancer at all stages of the disease, and that of their families and caretakers; and the psychological, behavioral and social factors that may influence the disease process. Psycho-oncology is an area of multi-disciplinary interest and has boundaries with the major specialities in oncology: the clinical disciplines (surgery, medicine, pediatrics, radiotherapy), epidemiology, immunology, endocrinology, biology, pathology, bioethics, palliative care, rehabilitation medicine, clinical trials research and decision making, as well as psychiatry and psychology. This international journal is published twelve times a year and will consider contributions to research of clinical and theoretical interest. Topics covered are wide-ranging and relate to the psychosocial aspects of cancer and AIDS-related tumors, including: epidemiology, quality of life, palliative and supportive care, psychiatry, psychology, sociology, social work, nursing and educational issues. Special reviews are offered from time to time. There is a section reviewing recently published books. A society news section is available for the dissemination of information relating to meetings, conferences and other society-related topics. Summary proceedings of important national and international symposia falling within the aims of the journal are presented.
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