Return to work improves quality of life and reduces psychosocial distress after radical cystectomy: data from a contemporary series of 230 German patients.
Henning Bahlburg, Moritz Reike, Karl Tully, Peter Bach, Marius Cristian Butea-Bocu, Florian Roghmann, Joachim Noldus, Guido Müller
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引用次数: 0
Abstract
Purpose: This study aims to evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL), psychosocial distress, and return to work (RTW) 2 years after radical cystectomy (RC) and inpatient rehabilitation (IR).
Material and methods: The study relied on prospectively collected data for 842 patients, who underwent 3 weeks of IR after RC and creation of an ileal conduit (IC) or ileal neobladder (INB). Validated questionnaires surveyed patients on HRQoL and psychosocial distress (EORTC QLQ-C30, QSC-R10). Furthermore, employment status was evaluated. Regression was performed to identify predictors for HRQol, psychosocial distress, and RTW.
Results: Two-hundred and thirty patients were employed pre-surgery (77.8% INB, 22.2% IC). Patients with an IC suffered significantly more often from locally advanced disease (≥ pT3: 43.1% vs 22.9%; p = 0.004). Two years after surgery, 16.1% of patients had died (median days of survival 302 (IQR 204-482). Global HRQoL improved steadily, while high psychosocial distress was present in 46.5% of patients 2 years after surgery. Employment was reported by 68.2% of patients, of which 90.3% worked full-time. Retirement was reported by 18.5%. Multivariate logistic regression analysis identified age ≤ 59 years as the only positive predictor for RTW 2 years after surgery (OR 7.730; 95% CI 3.369-17.736; p < 0.001). Gender, surgical technique, tumor stage, and socioeconomic status did not influence RTW in this model. In multivariate linear regression analysis, RTW was identified as an independent predictor of better global HRQoL (p = 0.018) and lower psychosocial distress (p < 0.001), whereas younger patient age was identified as an independent predictor for higher psychosocial distress (p = 0.002).
Conclusion: Global HRQoL and RTW are high among patients two years after RC. However, role and emotional, cognitive, and social functioning were significantly impaired, while high psychosocial distress persists in a material number of patients.
Implications for cancer survivors: Our study highlights how a successful RTW decreases psychosocial distress and increases QoL in patients after RC for urothelial cancer. Nonetheless, additional efforts by employers and healthcare providers are needed in aftercare after creation of an INB or IC.
期刊介绍:
Cancer survivorship is a worldwide concern. The aim of this multidisciplinary journal is to provide a global forum for new knowledge related to cancer survivorship. The journal publishes peer-reviewed papers relevant to improving the understanding, prevention, and management of the multiple areas related to cancer survivorship that can affect quality of care, access to care, longevity, and quality of life. It is a forum for research on humans (both laboratory and clinical), clinical studies, systematic and meta-analytic literature reviews, policy studies, and in rare situations case studies as long as they provide a new observation that should be followed up on to improve outcomes related to cancer survivors. Published articles represent a broad range of fields including oncology, primary care, physical medicine and rehabilitation, many other medical and nursing specialties, nursing, health services research, physical and occupational therapy, public health, behavioral medicine, psychology, social work, evidence-based policy, health economics, biobehavioral mechanisms, and qualitative analyses. The journal focuses exclusively on adult cancer survivors, young adult cancer survivors, and childhood cancer survivors who are young adults. Submissions must target those diagnosed with and treated for cancer.