1. Trajectories of fatigue in cancer patients during psychological care
- Author
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Robbert Sanderman, Maya J. Schroevers, Lei Zhu, Solveigh P Lingens, Adelita V. Ranchor, Marije L van der Lee, Martine M. Goedendorp, Bert Garssen, Mariët Hagedoorn, Psychology, Health & Technology, Medical and Clinical Psychology, Health Psychology Research (HPR), and Clinical Psychology and Experimental Psychopathology
- Subjects
Longitudinal study ,medicine.medical_specialty ,neoplasms ,Anxiety ,Disease cluster ,THERAPY ,DISTRESS ,Illness cognitions ,medicine ,BREAST-CANCER ,Humans ,Longitudinal Studies ,PREDICTORS ,SCALE ,Applied Psychology ,Depression (differential diagnoses) ,SURVIVORS ,Public Health, Environmental and Occupational Health ,Cancer ,Repeated measures design ,General Medicine ,General Chemistry ,medicine.disease ,Checklist ,oncology trajectory ,depression ,Physical therapy ,fatigue ,medicine.symptom ,Psychology - Abstract
ObjectivePsycho-oncological institutions offer specialized care for cancer patients. Little is known how this care might impact fatigue. This study aimed to identify fatigue trajectories during psychological care, examined factors distinguishing these trajectories and predicted fatigue severity after nine months of psychological care.DesignNaturalistic, longitudinal study of 238 cancer patients receiving psycho-oncological care in the Netherlands. Data were collected before initiation of psychological care (T1) and three (T2) and nine months (T3) afterwards. Latent class growth analysis, repeated measure analyses (RMA) and linear regression analysis were performed.Main Outcome MeasuresFatigue severity: Checklist Individual Strength.ResultsThree fatigue trajectories were identified: high- (30%), moderate- (62%) and low-level fatigue (8%). While statistically significant decreases in fatigue were found, this decrease was not clinically relevant. RMA showed main effects for time for fatigue trajectories on depression, anxiety, personal control and illness cognitions. Fatigue severity and physical symptoms at T1, but not demographic or clinical factors, were predictive of fatigue severity at T3.ConclusionsFatigue is very common during psycho-oncological care, and notably not clinically improving. As symptoms of fatigue, depression, anxiety and physical symptoms often cluster, supplementary fatigue treatment should be considered when it is decided to treat other symptoms first.
- Published
- 2022