Psychological recovery and well-being of spouses of patients with prostate cancer 5 years after primary treatment in Finland: a follow-up survey

被引:2
作者
Lehto, Ulla-Sisko [1 ]
Aromaa, Arpo [2 ]
Tammela, Teuvo [3 ,4 ]
机构
[1] Finnish Inst Hlth & Welf, Populat Hlth Publ Hlth & Welf, Helsinki, Finland
[2] Finnish Inst Hlth & Welf, Publ Hlth & Welf, Helsinki, Finland
[3] Tampere Univ Hosp, Dept Surg, Tampere, Finland
[4] Univ Tampere, Fac Med & Med Technol, Tampere, Finland
关键词
rehabilitation medicine; social medicine; prostate disease; quality of Life; urological tumours; epidemiologic studies; QUALITY-OF-LIFE; RADICAL PROSTATECTOMY; FEMALE PARTNERS; MEN; DISTRESS; SATISFACTION; HEALTH; STAGE; EXPERIENCES; ADJUSTMENT;
D O I
10.1136/bmjopen-2022-063435
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objective and settingTo study longitudinally cancer-related experiences of spouses of patients with prostate cancer and the predictors of their psychological recovery and quality of life (QOL) by following the participants of our previous survey at primary cancer treatment in a university hospital. Design A 5-year longitudinal cohort design. Participants and procedure A follow-up questionnaire was mailed to the female spouses/partners who participated in our previous survey (n=104). We quantitatively explored the spouses' prostate cancer-related experiences since the previous survey and measured their current psychological symptom distress and well-being/QOL. Seventy-seven (74%) of the initial participants responded. Outcomes The main outcome measures were the spouses' psychological recovery (psychological symptoms at the initial survey vs currently) and well-being/QOL (depressive symptoms, domains of QOL) at 5 years. We analysed their predictors with regression analyses. Results The treatment had been prostatectomy in 70% of the patients. Psychological distress had alleviated in 76% of spouses (p<0.001) and emotional changes decreased (p=0.02), but a deteriorating impact on the partnership (from 4% to 16%) and on sex life ('strong impact' from 23% to 37%) had increased. The outcomes were inversely associated with negative depression-related psychological symptoms and emotional changes either initially or at follow-up. However, some early experiences also predicted the outcomes when other factors were controlled for. Prostate cancer-related information received by the spouses from several sources (leaflets/handouts, TV/radio, internet) predicted better recovery and well-being/QOL, whereas the patients' prostate cancer and treatment-related symptoms (pain, irritability/anger, bowel dysfunction) predicted poorer recovery and well-being/QOL in spouses. Conclusions A major negative impact of prostate cancer was experienced by the spouses still 5 years after primary treatment. Early prostate cancer-related experiences predicted long-term psychological recovery and QOL. Responding to the early information needs of spouses and effective symptom management for the patients are likely to enhance the spouses' long-term recovery and well-being.
引用
收藏
页数:12
相关论文
共 42 条
[1]   Patients' Supportive Care Needs Beyond the End of Cancer Treatment: A Prospective, Longitudinal Survey [J].
Armes, Jo ;
Crowe, Maggie ;
Colbourne, Lynne ;
Morgan, Helen ;
Murrells, Trevor ;
Oakley, Catherine ;
Palmer, Nigel ;
Ream, Emma ;
Young, Annie ;
Richardson, Alison .
JOURNAL OF CLINICAL ONCOLOGY, 2009, 27 (36) :6172-6179
[2]   Information Seeking and Satisfaction with Information Sources Among Spouses of Men with Newly Diagnosed Local-Stage Prostate Cancer [J].
Bansal, Aasthaa ;
Koepl, Lisel M. ;
Fedorenko, Catherine R. ;
Li, Chunyu ;
Smith, Judith Lee ;
Hall, Ingrid J. ;
Penson, David F. ;
Ramsey, Scott D. .
JOURNAL OF CANCER EDUCATION, 2018, 33 (02) :325-331
[3]   A literature review of the relationship between dyadic coping and dyadic outcomes in cancer couples [J].
Chen, Meizhen ;
Gong, Jiali ;
Cao, Qian ;
Luo, Xingjuan ;
Li, Jieyu ;
Li, Qiuping .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF ONCOLOGY NURSING, 2021, 54
[4]   Psychosocial adjustment of female partners of men with prostate cancer: A review of the literature [J].
Couper, Jeremy ;
Bloch, Sidney ;
Love, Anthony ;
Macvean, Michelle ;
Duchesne, Gillian M. ;
Kissane, David .
PSYCHO-ONCOLOGY, 2006, 15 (11) :937-953
[5]   MEASURING PSYCHOLOGICAL AND PHYSICAL DISTRESS IN CANCER-PATIENTS - STRUCTURE AND APPLICATION OF THE ROTTERDAM-SYMPTOM-CHECKLIST [J].
DEHAES, JCJM ;
VANKNIPPENBERG, FCE ;
NEIJT, JP .
BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER, 1990, 62 (06) :1034-1038
[6]   Psychological distress in spouses of men treated for early-stage prostate carcinoma [J].
Eton, DT ;
Lepore, SJ ;
Helgeson, VS .
CANCER, 2005, 103 (11) :2412-2418
[7]   An assessment of quality of life following radical prostatectomy, high dose external beam radiation therapy and brachytherapy iodine implantation as monotherapies for localized prostate cancer [J].
Frank, Steven J. ;
Pisters, Louis L. ;
Davis, John ;
Lee, Andrew K. ;
Bassett, Roland ;
Kuban, Deborah A. .
JOURNAL OF UROLOGY, 2007, 177 (06) :2151-2156
[8]   Patient-reported 'ever had' and 'current' long-term physical symptoms after prostate cancer treatments [J].
Gavin, Anna T. ;
Drummond, Frances J. ;
Donnelly, Conan ;
O'Leary, Eamonn ;
Sharp, Linda ;
Kinnear, Heather R. .
BJU INTERNATIONAL, 2015, 116 (03) :397-406
[9]   Social Support and Adjustment Among Wives of Men with Prostate Cancer [J].
Gottlieb, Benjamin H. ;
Maitland, Scott B. ;
Brown, Jamie .
JOURNAL OF PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY, 2014, 32 (01) :16-36
[10]   Experiences of female partners of prostate cancer survivors: A systematic review and thematic synthesis [J].
Green, Anna ;
Winter, Natalie ;
DiGiacomo, Michelle ;
Oliffe, John L. ;
Ralph, Nicholas ;
Dunn, Jeff ;
Chambers, Suzanne K. .
HEALTH & SOCIAL CARE IN THE COMMUNITY, 2022, 30 (04) :1213-1232