Back to Search Start Over

Quality of Life in Adolescents and Young Adults: The Role of Symptom Burden

Authors :
Angela Steineck
Miranda C. Bradford
Alison O'Daffer
Kaitlyn M. Fladeboe
Maeve B. O'Donnell
Samantha Scott
Joyce P. Yi-Frazier
Abby R. Rosenberg
Source :
Journal of pain and symptom management. 64(3)
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with cancer report worse health-related quality of life (HRQOL) than other age groups. Symptom burden is a modifiable predictor of HRQOL.The objective of this study was to identify which symptoms are most burdensome to AYAs with advanced cancer.In this observational study, English-speaking individuals aged 12-25 years undergoing treatment for advanced cancer completed assessments of symptom burden (Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale) and HRQOL (Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory Generic Form and Cancer Module; minimal clinically important difference 4.4). We dichotomized participants as having low (7) or high (≥7) symptom prevalence. Mixed regression models estimated HRQOL differences between groups. For individual symptoms, unadjusted mixed models estimated HRQOL reductions.N = 58 AYAs completed baseline surveys. The median age was 17 years (IQR 15-19), 58% were male, 59% identified as white, and 44% were diagnosed with leukemia/lymphoma. High symptom prevalence was associated with a mean generic HRQOL 7 points lower (95% CI: -11, -3; P0.01) and cancer-specific HRQOL score 12 points lower (95% CI: -17, -7; P0.01) than low symptom prevalence. The most prevalent symptoms were fatigue (71%), pain (58%), and difficulty sleeping (58%). Fatigue (-8), difficulty concentrating (-7), and mouth sores (-6) were associated with the greatest generic HRQOL score reductions. Dysphagia (-12), difficulty concentrating (-12), and sadness (-11) were associated with the greatest cancer-specific HRQOL score reductions.The symptom experience among AYAs with advanced cancer is unique. Separate evaluation of AYA's symptoms may optimize management and improve HRQOL.

Details

ISSN :
18736513
Volume :
64
Issue :
3
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of pain and symptom management
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....87af8ddb6e6755f207c931a2741fa487