The long-term burden of a symptom cluster and association with longitudinal physical and emotional functioning in breast cancer survivors

Authors

  • Freja Ejlebæk Ebbestad a Survivorship and Inequality in Cancer, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Gunn Ammitzbøll a Survivorship and Inequality in Cancer, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark; b COMPAS, Danish Research Center for Equality in Cancer, Zealand University Hospital, Næstved, Denmark
  • Trine Allerslev Horsbøll c National Institute of Public Health, The University of Southern, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Ingelise Andersen d Section of Social Medicine, Department of Public Health, University of Copenhagen, Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Christoffer Johansen e Cancer Survivorship and Treatment Late Effects (CASTLE), Centre for Cancer and Organ Diseases, Rigshospitalet, Copenhagen, Denmark; g Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health, University of Copenhagen, Denmark
  • Bo Zehran f Clinical Physiology and Nuclear Medicine, Herlev and Gentofte Hospital, Denmark
  • Susanne Oksbjerg Dalton a Survivorship and Inequality in Cancer, Danish Cancer Society Research Center, Copenhagen, Denmark; b COMPAS, Danish Research Center for Equality in Cancer, Zealand University Hospital, Næstved, Denmark; g Institute of Clinical Medicine, Faculty of Health, University of Copenhagen, Denmark

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186X.2023.2185909

Keywords:

Fatigue, pain, sleep initiation and maintenance disorders, breast neoplasms, survivorship, quality of life, risk assessment

Abstract

Background

Fatigue, insomnia and pain are some of the most common and distressing symptoms experienced during breast cancer (BC) treatment and survivorship. The symptoms have been found to impact one another and to form a symptom cluster, and greater severity of the symptoms may be negatively associated with physical and emotional functioning in survivorship. In exploratory analyses from a randomized controlled trial examining the effect of progressive resistance training on the development of lymphedema after BC, we aimed to examine the burden of the symptom cluster fatigue-pain-insomnia, and its prognostic value for long-term symptom severity as well as emotional and physical functioning

Material and Methods

Latent profile analysis was used to identify groups with similar severity of pain, fatigue and insomnia among 158 patients with BC two weeks after surgery. Mixed effects Tobit regression models were used to estimate fatigue, pain, insomnia, and physical and emotional functioning 20 weeks, 1 year and 3.5 years after surgery.

Results

Two symptom burden groups were identified: 80% of women had a low severity while 20% of women had a high severity of the three symptoms after BC surgery. 3.5 years later, the women with high symptom burden post-surgery still had higher pain, insomnia and fatigue scores than women with low symptom burden. High symptom burden post-surgery was associated with worse physical functioning 3.5 years later, while emotional functioning was only negatively impacted during the first year.

Discussion

These findings warrant larger studies investigating if symptom burden early in BC trajectory can be used for risk stratification for persistent symptoms and diminished physical functioning with the purpose of developing and implementing targeted interventions.

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Published

2023-07-03

How to Cite

Ejlebæk Ebbestad, F., Ammitzbøll, G., Allerslev Horsbøll, T., Andersen, I., Johansen, C., Zehran, B., & Oksbjerg Dalton, S. (2023). The long-term burden of a symptom cluster and association with longitudinal physical and emotional functioning in breast cancer survivors. Acta Oncologica, 62(7), 706–713. https://doi.org/10.1080/0284186X.2023.2185909