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Erschienen in: Supportive Care in Cancer 8/2008

01.08.2008 | Original Article

Exploring the differential experience of breast cancer treatment-related symptoms: a cluster analytic approach

verfasst von: Clement K. Gwede, Brent J. Small, Pamela N. Munster, Michael A. Andrykowski, Paul B. Jacobsen

Erschienen in: Supportive Care in Cancer | Ausgabe 8/2008

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Abstract

Introduction

Cancer patients experience multiple concurrent symptoms. This exploratory analysis assessed symptom burden among patients undergoing chemotherapy for breast cancer to identify distinct subgroups of patients who experience differential symptom burden and assessed whether the patient subgroups were associated with deleterious quality of life (QOL) outcomes.

Materials and methods

Women (N = 133) with stage I and II breast cancer undergoing adjuvant chemotherapy after primary surgery were evaluated at baseline and at the end of chemotherapy using the Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale (MSAS) and the SF-36 QOL questionnaire. Post treatment MSAS symptoms were included in hierarchical cluster analysis. Two patient subgroups were identified that corresponded to a high-symptom prevalence group and a low-symptom group.

Results and discussion

No marked, statistically significant differences were found between groups on demographic, symptoms, QOL, or treatment variables at baseline. Patients in the high-symptom cluster were more likely to have stage I disease (p < 0.05). The two groups of patients showed significant differences in end-of-treatment symptoms and QOL scores (p < 0.05). The high-symptom burden group was more likely to report greater symptom prevalence and poorer QOL.

Conclusions

Future research needs to examine why these differences occur despite similarities in treatment and how symptom burden can be reduced for the high-symptom prevalence group.
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Metadaten
Titel
Exploring the differential experience of breast cancer treatment-related symptoms: a cluster analytic approach
verfasst von
Clement K. Gwede
Brent J. Small
Pamela N. Munster
Michael A. Andrykowski
Paul B. Jacobsen
Publikationsdatum
01.08.2008
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Supportive Care in Cancer / Ausgabe 8/2008
Print ISSN: 0941-4355
Elektronische ISSN: 1433-7339
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s00520-007-0364-2

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