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Low Post-Treatment Quality of Life and the High Incidence of Pain Are Common and Significantly Exacerbated in Depressed Head and Neck Patients Treated with Definitive Accelerated Radiotherapy.

Authors :
Heyda, Alicja
Księżniak-Baran, Dorota
Wygoda, Andrzej
Składowski, Krzysztof
Source :
Cancers; Jan2024, Vol. 16 Issue 1, p79, 13p
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Simple Summary: Patients treated with definitive accelerated radiotherapy (DART) struggle with low quality of life, pain and persistent treatment-related symptoms even many years after the treatment. Everyday pain in the head, neck and shoulder areas is present among almost all HNC survivors treated with DART. One-third of the examined DART patients were depressed. The depressed group scored significantly worse in most of the quality-of-life subscales and suffered more intense pain than the non-depressed. Head and neck cancer survivors, especially those who are depressed, may require additional psychosocial, physiotherapeutic and medical intervention programs. (1) Background: The goal of this study is to evaluate psychological tolerance and health-related quality of life (QOL) in head and neck (HN) cancer patients treated with definitive accelerated radiotherapy (DART). (2) Methods: 76 recurrence-free patients eligible for the study, who were treated with DART in the CAIR-2 phase III clinical study (median of follow-up = 47 months), completed EORTC QLQ-C30 with the H&N35 module, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and Visual–Analog Scales (VAS) of pain in HN and the neck/arm areas. (3) Results: The most dominant symptoms measured with QLQ-C30 were as follows: fatigue (44/100), sleeplessness (39/100), financial problems (38/100) and pain (32/100). Within the H&N35, the highest scores were reported on the subscales of sticky saliva (60/100), mouth dryness (65/100) and increased intake of painkillers (50/100). Pain (VAS) was reported by 87% (HN area) and 78% (shoulder area) of the patients, with a mean score of 3/10. One-third of the patients reported depressive moods (HADS ≥ 15 points) with an average score of 12.5/42 p. The depressed group, who smoked more as compared to the non-depressed group before DART (96% vs. 78%) and required steroids treatment (85% vs. 58%) during DART, also scored significantly worse on 23 of the 35 subscales of QLQ-C30 and H&N35 and experienced more intense pain (VAS). Women and less-advanced patients scored better in several aspects of quality of life. (4) Conclusions: Patients treated with DART struggle with low quality of life and persistent treatment-related symptoms including constant pain. HNC survivors, especially those who are depressed, may require additional psychosocial, rehabilitation and medical intervention programmes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
20726694
Volume :
16
Issue :
1
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
Cancers
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
174717522
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers16010079