Patient-reported 'ever had' and 'current' long term physical symptoms following prostate cancer treatments


Autoria(s): Gavin, Anna T; Drummond, Frances J; Donnelly, Conan; O'Leary, Eamonn; Sharp, Linda; Kinnear, Heather R.
Data(s)

01/09/2015

Resumo

OBJECTIVE: To document prostate cancer patient reported 'ever experienced' and 'current' prevalence of disease specific physical symptoms stratified by primary treatment received.<br/>PATIENTS: 3,348 prostate cancer survivors 2-15 years post diagnosis.<br/>METHODS: Cross-sectional, postal survey of 6,559 survivors diagnosed 2-15 years ago with primary, invasive PCa (ICD10-C61) identified via national, population based cancer registries in Northern Ireland and Republic of Ireland. Questions included symptoms at diagnosis, primary treatments and physical symptoms (impotence/urinary incontinence/bowel problems/breast changes/loss of libido/hot flashes/fatigue) experienced 'ever' and at questionnaire completion ("current"). Symptom proportions were weighted by age, country and time since diagnosis. Bonferroni corrections were applied for multiple comparisons.<br/>RESULTS: Adjusted response rate 54%; 75% reported at least one 'current' physical symptom ('ever':90%), with 29% reporting at least three. Prevalence varied by treatment; overall 57% reported current impotence; this was highest following radical prostatectomy (RP)76% followed by external beam radiotherapy with concurrent hormone therapy (HT); 64%. Urinary incontinence (overall 'current' 16%) was highest following RP ('current'28%, 'ever'70%). While 42% of brachytherapy patients reported no 'current' symptoms; 43% reported 'current' impotence and 8% 'current' incontinence. 'Current' hot flashes (41%), breast changes (18%) and fatigue (28%) were reported more often by patients on HT.<br/>CONCLUSION: Symptoms following prostate cancer are common, often multiple, persist long-term and vary by treatment. They represent a significant health burden. An estimated 1.6% of men over 45 is a prostate cancer survivor currently experiencing an adverse physical symptom. Recognition and treatment of physical symptoms should be prioritised in patient follow-up. This information should facilitate men and clinicians when deciding about treatment as differences in survival between radical treatments is minimal.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/portal/en/publications/patientreported-ever-had-and-current-long-term-physical-symptoms-following-prostate-cancer-treatments(f6a2d56a-0968-4db8-acbd-d62b5a12fb10).html

http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/bju.13036

http://pure.qub.ac.uk/ws/files/13749093/Patient_reported_ever_had_and_current_long_term_physical_symptoms_following_prostrate_cancer_treatments.pdf

Idioma(s)

eng

Direitos

info:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess

Fonte

Gavin , A T , Drummond , F J , Donnelly , C , O'Leary , E , Sharp , L & Kinnear , H R 2015 , ' Patient-reported 'ever had' and 'current' long term physical symptoms following prostate cancer treatments ' BJU International , vol 116 , no. 3 , pp. 397-406 . DOI: 10.1111/bju.13036

Tipo

article