Original scientific paper
Quality of Life of Croatian Breast Cancer Patients Receiving Adjuvant Treatment – Comparison to Long-Term Breast Cancer Survivors
Jure Murgic
orcid.org/0000-0001-8152-0494
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Zeljko Soldic
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Dubravka Vrljic
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Ivan Samija
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Iva Kirac
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Surgery, Zagreb, Croatia
Ante Bolanca
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Zvonko Kusic
; University of Zagreb, »Sestre milosrdnice« University Hospital Center, Department of Oncology and Nuclear Medicine, Zagreb,
Abstract
Quality of life (QoL) is an important outcome in assessment of breast cancer treatment. Data comparing QoL after different adjuvant treatments and QoL data on long-term survivors are modest. The aim of this study was to compare QoL scores of patients receiving adjuvant treatment with long-term breast cancer survivors, and to correlate QoL scores with clinical data. Sixty patients were recruited for the study: 20 during adjuvant radiotherapy, 20 during adjuvant chemotherapy, and 20 long-term breast cancer survivors. QoL was assessed using the self-administered EORTC core questionnaire QLQ-C30 and breast cancer-specific module QLQ-BR23. QoL scores between groups were compared using Kruskal-Wallis test and effects of clinical factors on QoL domains were tested using multiple regression analysis. No differences between three groups were observed in terms of all QoL scores. As measured by QLQ-C30, least affected QoL scales were cognitive functioning, social functioning, and physical functioning in all three patients group, while insomnia and pain scales were the most detrimentally affected. Among the groups, the highest scores of global health status and other functional scales were in adjuvant chemotherapy group. Measured by QLQ-BR23, body image scale was most affected, while sexual functioning scale was minimally affected, in all three groups. Multiple regression analysis has shown that the patient age were the only statistically significant predictor for global health status scale, and constipation scale. Our results demonstrated similar and favorable QoL in all three groups of patients and provided basic information on QoL in Croatian breast cancer patients.
Keywords
breast cancer; quality of life; adjuvant chemotherapy; adjuvant radiotherapy; long-term survivors; questionnaires
Hrčak ID:
94917
URI
Publication date:
27.12.2012.
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