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Psychological distress prior to surgery is related to symptom burden and health status in lung cancer survivors

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Date

2021-09-20

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Linares-Moya, Marta
Rodriguez-Torres, Janet
Heredia-Ciuro, Alejandro
Granados-Santiago, Maria
Lopez-Lopez, Laura
Quero-Valenzuela, Florencio
Carmen Valenza, Marie

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Springer
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Abstract

Purpose Patients with lung cancer experience a variety of distressing symptoms which could adversely affect quality of life. The aim of this study was to determine whether psychological distress prior to surgery is associated to health status and symptom burden in lung cancer survivors.Methods A longitudinal observational study with 1-year follow-up was carried out. Health status was measured by the WHO Disability Assessment Scale (WHO-DAS 2.0), the Euroqol-5 dimensions (EQ-5D) and the Pittsburgh Sleep Quality Index (PSQI). Symptoms severity included dyspnoea (Multidimensional Profile of Dyspnoea); pain (Brief Pain Inventory); fatigue (Fatigue Severity Scale); and cough (Leicester Cough Questionnaire).Results One hundred seventy-four lung cancer patients were included. Patients in the group with psychological distress presented a worse self-perceived health status, functionality and sleep quality. The group with psychological distress also presented higher dyspnoea, fatigue and pain.Conclusion Patients with psychological distress prior surgery present with a greater symptom burden and a poorer self-perceived health status, lower functionality and sleep quality, than patients without distress 1 year after the lung resection.

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Lung cancer, Health status, Survivors, Symptoms, Quality-of-life, Multidimensional dyspnea profile, Sleep quality, Functional status, Shoulder pain, Depression, Fatigue, Diagnosis, Anxiety, Outcomes

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