Quality of Life of Lung Cancer Patients in a Randomized Clinical Trial Evaluated by a Psychosocial Well-Being Questionnaire

Authors

  • S. Kaasa Department of Medical Oncology and Radiotherapy, Norwegian Radium Hospital, the Institute for Social Research and the Institute of Applied Social Research, Oslo, Norway
  • A. Mastekaasa Department of Medical Oncology and Radiotherapy, Norwegian Radium Hospital, the Institute for Social Research and the Institute of Applied Social Research, Oslo, Norway
  • S. Naess Department of Medical Oncology and Radiotherapy, Norwegian Radium Hospital, the Institute for Social Research and the Institute of Applied Social Research, Oslo, Norway

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.3109/02841868809093551

Keywords:

Lung neoplasms; non-small cell cancer, radiother- apy, chemotherapy, randomized trial, psychosocial well-being, quality of life

Abstract

The quality of life of patients treated with radiotherapy and chemotherapy for non-small cell lung cancer is compared in a randomized study. A standardized questionnaire composed of 12 questions covering psychosocial well-being (10 question index), and global quality of life evaluation (2 questions) was used to evaluate the patient's quality of life. Data were collected before treatment was started and at 7 different occasions up to 52 weeks after the beginning of the first treatment. The psychosocial well- being index and the 2 global questions were found to have a high degree of validity in a previous study. Two weeks after the start of treatment, the psychosocial well-being index for patients receiving radiotherapy was significantly higher than for patients treated by cytostatic drugs. This observation was confirmed by the 2 global questions. No differences in the quality of life were detected in the follow-up period (6–52 weeks).

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Published

1988-01-01

How to Cite

Kaasa, S., Mastekaasa, A., & Naess, S. (1988). Quality of Life of Lung Cancer Patients in a Randomized Clinical Trial Evaluated by a Psychosocial Well-Being Questionnaire. Acta Oncologica, 27(4), 335–342. https://doi.org/10.3109/02841868809093551