Psychiatric Comorbidity Should Not Forestall Cancer Treatment

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Psychiatric Comorbidity Should Not Forestall Cancer Treatment

MIAMI – Serious psychiatric comorbidities should not deprive cancer patients of life-salvaging or life-enriching therapies, according to two psychiatrists who have helped such patients to achieve successful outcomes with treatment for their physical and mental disorders.

Aggressive psychiatric treatment preserved patients’ eligibility for bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and allowed terminally ill patients to "participate in the important process of saying goodbye," the clinicians reported during separate presentations at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Bone Marrow Transplantation Feasible

Dr. Isabel Schuermeyer, director of psycho-oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, underscored her contention that even suicidal ideation should not, in most cases, be a contraindication for BMT. She described the case of a 55-year-old mantle cell lymphoma patient with a lengthy history of depression who developed myelodysplastic syndrome following an initial autologous BMT.

"I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT."

While under consideration for repeat BMT, he developed suicidal ideation, including formulating a plan to drive a car into a wall or poison himself with carbon monoxide. Intensive, collaborative management and a brief inpatient psychiatry admission combined to stabilize the patient on mirtazapine (Remeron) and clonazepam within 2 weeks, she reported. Although rapidly progressive medical complications precluded a second BMT, his psychiatric condition became stable.

A second psychiatric intervention involved a 57-year-old woman with multiple myeloma who drove 1,000 miles without stopping, just to make an appointment at the Cleveland Clinic. This followed her firing of four oncologists in 6 months in her city of origin. Relevant history included an early suicide attempt, alcohol abuse, and anxiety.

On examination, the patient exhibited racing thoughts, a diminished need for sleep, and excessive activity and distractibility. With close follow-up by the psychosocial oncology team and initiation of quetiapine (Seroquel) therapy, the patient’s hypomanic symptoms soon abated, and she was able to safely undergo a transplant.

"She actually did really well and had some insight," Dr. Schuermeyer said in an interview. "She was sleeping 8-9 hours a night."

The literature on psychiatric suitability for BMT is sparse, she noted. In 2006, Foster and colleagues reported (Bone Marrow Transplant. 2006:37:223-8) that nearly 90% of BMT professionals would not transplant a patient with suicidal ideation.

A small case series (Psychiatry Clin. Neurosci. 2003:57:311-5) reported that six of seven patients with psychiatric illnesses were able to undergo BMT with the exception of one patient with borderline personality disorder.

There is a widespread belief that patients with a psychiatric history may not be good candidates for BMT due to concerns about adherence, Dr. Schuermeyer noted. "Everyone wants great outcomes with BMT," she said in an interview.

However, her belief, grounded in experience, is that close collaboration and competent mental health care can overcome psychiatric obstacles in the vast majority of cases. "I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT. At the end of the day, this is a lifesaving treatment," she said.

Unlike in solid organ transplantation, years of compliance are not required. "Let’s just save peoples’ lives. Let’s be aggressive and work together as a team," she said.

Depression Eased by ECT

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles of the psychiatry oncology service at the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston advocated aggressive treatment of another sort. Using three clinical cases as examples, he outlined the effective use of electroconvulsive therapy in cancer patients with profound treatment-resistant depression that included catatonic symptoms.

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles

Catatonia, he said, is an uncommon entity in general, and even more so in cancer patients; it is likely often unrecognized, however, and can be a manifestation of paraneoplastic encephalopathy, CNS chemotherapy toxicity, or psychiatric in origin.

In one such patient, a 40-year-woman with unresectable T4bN2cM0 maxillary adenoid cystic carcinoma treated with radiation and combination chemotherapy, was admitted to the hospital for failure to thrive, weight loss, and immobility. On examination, she demonstrated mutism, posturing, limb rigidity and mild waxy flexibility, gegenhalten hypertonia, and grasp reflex.

While lorazepam (Ativan) 2 mg IV temporarily resolved her symptoms, the team was unable to achieve any sustained response to psychopharmacologic treatment. The patient responded fully to six treatments with electroconvulsive therapy and was able to complete radiation and chemotherapy, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

A second patient with profound depression had complete response to six rounds of ECT after he failed to respond to a variety of medications following resection of right temporal lesions and an anterior temporal lobectomy for multicentric glioblastoma multiforme.

Very few studies have been published of ECT in cancer patients, in large measure because of a stigma not only among members of the general public, but in medical training as well, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

 

 

"Jack Nicholson did for shock therapy what 'Jaws' did for sharks," he wryly paraphrased British psychiatrist Susan Benbow as saying in an allusion to the depiction of ECT in the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest."

In practice, ECT can reduce emotional suffering and physical pain and can "restore capacity for enjoyment of whatever life remains to be lived," said Dr. Fernandez-Robles.

For terminally ill patients with unremitting depression, it offers hope for engagement "in the important process of saying good-byes and wrapping things up."

Adverse effects can include nausea, headache, postictal delirium, cardiovascular complications, prolonged apnea, and well-known effects on anterograde and recent retrograde memory. Indeed, patients described by Dr. Fernandez-Robles did experience memory-related side effects.

Nonetheless, he said each of the patients had "clear-cut" indications for ECT and their quality of life improved dramatically as a result of the therapy.

"I am really interested in ... the impact of serious mental illness on the quality of care we give to our patients," he said following the meeting.

Neither presenter disclosed any relevant conflicts of interest.

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MIAMI – Serious psychiatric comorbidities should not deprive cancer patients of life-salvaging or life-enriching therapies, according to two psychiatrists who have helped such patients to achieve successful outcomes with treatment for their physical and mental disorders.

Aggressive psychiatric treatment preserved patients’ eligibility for bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and allowed terminally ill patients to "participate in the important process of saying goodbye," the clinicians reported during separate presentations at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Bone Marrow Transplantation Feasible

Dr. Isabel Schuermeyer, director of psycho-oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, underscored her contention that even suicidal ideation should not, in most cases, be a contraindication for BMT. She described the case of a 55-year-old mantle cell lymphoma patient with a lengthy history of depression who developed myelodysplastic syndrome following an initial autologous BMT.

"I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT."

While under consideration for repeat BMT, he developed suicidal ideation, including formulating a plan to drive a car into a wall or poison himself with carbon monoxide. Intensive, collaborative management and a brief inpatient psychiatry admission combined to stabilize the patient on mirtazapine (Remeron) and clonazepam within 2 weeks, she reported. Although rapidly progressive medical complications precluded a second BMT, his psychiatric condition became stable.

A second psychiatric intervention involved a 57-year-old woman with multiple myeloma who drove 1,000 miles without stopping, just to make an appointment at the Cleveland Clinic. This followed her firing of four oncologists in 6 months in her city of origin. Relevant history included an early suicide attempt, alcohol abuse, and anxiety.

On examination, the patient exhibited racing thoughts, a diminished need for sleep, and excessive activity and distractibility. With close follow-up by the psychosocial oncology team and initiation of quetiapine (Seroquel) therapy, the patient’s hypomanic symptoms soon abated, and she was able to safely undergo a transplant.

"She actually did really well and had some insight," Dr. Schuermeyer said in an interview. "She was sleeping 8-9 hours a night."

The literature on psychiatric suitability for BMT is sparse, she noted. In 2006, Foster and colleagues reported (Bone Marrow Transplant. 2006:37:223-8) that nearly 90% of BMT professionals would not transplant a patient with suicidal ideation.

A small case series (Psychiatry Clin. Neurosci. 2003:57:311-5) reported that six of seven patients with psychiatric illnesses were able to undergo BMT with the exception of one patient with borderline personality disorder.

There is a widespread belief that patients with a psychiatric history may not be good candidates for BMT due to concerns about adherence, Dr. Schuermeyer noted. "Everyone wants great outcomes with BMT," she said in an interview.

However, her belief, grounded in experience, is that close collaboration and competent mental health care can overcome psychiatric obstacles in the vast majority of cases. "I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT. At the end of the day, this is a lifesaving treatment," she said.

Unlike in solid organ transplantation, years of compliance are not required. "Let’s just save peoples’ lives. Let’s be aggressive and work together as a team," she said.

Depression Eased by ECT

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles of the psychiatry oncology service at the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston advocated aggressive treatment of another sort. Using three clinical cases as examples, he outlined the effective use of electroconvulsive therapy in cancer patients with profound treatment-resistant depression that included catatonic symptoms.

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles

Catatonia, he said, is an uncommon entity in general, and even more so in cancer patients; it is likely often unrecognized, however, and can be a manifestation of paraneoplastic encephalopathy, CNS chemotherapy toxicity, or psychiatric in origin.

In one such patient, a 40-year-woman with unresectable T4bN2cM0 maxillary adenoid cystic carcinoma treated with radiation and combination chemotherapy, was admitted to the hospital for failure to thrive, weight loss, and immobility. On examination, she demonstrated mutism, posturing, limb rigidity and mild waxy flexibility, gegenhalten hypertonia, and grasp reflex.

While lorazepam (Ativan) 2 mg IV temporarily resolved her symptoms, the team was unable to achieve any sustained response to psychopharmacologic treatment. The patient responded fully to six treatments with electroconvulsive therapy and was able to complete radiation and chemotherapy, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

A second patient with profound depression had complete response to six rounds of ECT after he failed to respond to a variety of medications following resection of right temporal lesions and an anterior temporal lobectomy for multicentric glioblastoma multiforme.

Very few studies have been published of ECT in cancer patients, in large measure because of a stigma not only among members of the general public, but in medical training as well, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

 

 

"Jack Nicholson did for shock therapy what 'Jaws' did for sharks," he wryly paraphrased British psychiatrist Susan Benbow as saying in an allusion to the depiction of ECT in the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest."

In practice, ECT can reduce emotional suffering and physical pain and can "restore capacity for enjoyment of whatever life remains to be lived," said Dr. Fernandez-Robles.

For terminally ill patients with unremitting depression, it offers hope for engagement "in the important process of saying good-byes and wrapping things up."

Adverse effects can include nausea, headache, postictal delirium, cardiovascular complications, prolonged apnea, and well-known effects on anterograde and recent retrograde memory. Indeed, patients described by Dr. Fernandez-Robles did experience memory-related side effects.

Nonetheless, he said each of the patients had "clear-cut" indications for ECT and their quality of life improved dramatically as a result of the therapy.

"I am really interested in ... the impact of serious mental illness on the quality of care we give to our patients," he said following the meeting.

Neither presenter disclosed any relevant conflicts of interest.

MIAMI – Serious psychiatric comorbidities should not deprive cancer patients of life-salvaging or life-enriching therapies, according to two psychiatrists who have helped such patients to achieve successful outcomes with treatment for their physical and mental disorders.

Aggressive psychiatric treatment preserved patients’ eligibility for bone marrow transplantation (BMT) and allowed terminally ill patients to "participate in the important process of saying goodbye," the clinicians reported during separate presentations at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Bone Marrow Transplantation Feasible

Dr. Isabel Schuermeyer, director of psycho-oncology at the Cleveland Clinic, underscored her contention that even suicidal ideation should not, in most cases, be a contraindication for BMT. She described the case of a 55-year-old mantle cell lymphoma patient with a lengthy history of depression who developed myelodysplastic syndrome following an initial autologous BMT.

"I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT."

While under consideration for repeat BMT, he developed suicidal ideation, including formulating a plan to drive a car into a wall or poison himself with carbon monoxide. Intensive, collaborative management and a brief inpatient psychiatry admission combined to stabilize the patient on mirtazapine (Remeron) and clonazepam within 2 weeks, she reported. Although rapidly progressive medical complications precluded a second BMT, his psychiatric condition became stable.

A second psychiatric intervention involved a 57-year-old woman with multiple myeloma who drove 1,000 miles without stopping, just to make an appointment at the Cleveland Clinic. This followed her firing of four oncologists in 6 months in her city of origin. Relevant history included an early suicide attempt, alcohol abuse, and anxiety.

On examination, the patient exhibited racing thoughts, a diminished need for sleep, and excessive activity and distractibility. With close follow-up by the psychosocial oncology team and initiation of quetiapine (Seroquel) therapy, the patient’s hypomanic symptoms soon abated, and she was able to safely undergo a transplant.

"She actually did really well and had some insight," Dr. Schuermeyer said in an interview. "She was sleeping 8-9 hours a night."

The literature on psychiatric suitability for BMT is sparse, she noted. In 2006, Foster and colleagues reported (Bone Marrow Transplant. 2006:37:223-8) that nearly 90% of BMT professionals would not transplant a patient with suicidal ideation.

A small case series (Psychiatry Clin. Neurosci. 2003:57:311-5) reported that six of seven patients with psychiatric illnesses were able to undergo BMT with the exception of one patient with borderline personality disorder.

There is a widespread belief that patients with a psychiatric history may not be good candidates for BMT due to concerns about adherence, Dr. Schuermeyer noted. "Everyone wants great outcomes with BMT," she said in an interview.

However, her belief, grounded in experience, is that close collaboration and competent mental health care can overcome psychiatric obstacles in the vast majority of cases. "I think there should be no psychiatric contraindication to BMT. At the end of the day, this is a lifesaving treatment," she said.

Unlike in solid organ transplantation, years of compliance are not required. "Let’s just save peoples’ lives. Let’s be aggressive and work together as a team," she said.

Depression Eased by ECT

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles of the psychiatry oncology service at the Massachusetts General Hospital Cancer Center in Boston advocated aggressive treatment of another sort. Using three clinical cases as examples, he outlined the effective use of electroconvulsive therapy in cancer patients with profound treatment-resistant depression that included catatonic symptoms.

Dr. Carlos G. Fernandez-Robles

Catatonia, he said, is an uncommon entity in general, and even more so in cancer patients; it is likely often unrecognized, however, and can be a manifestation of paraneoplastic encephalopathy, CNS chemotherapy toxicity, or psychiatric in origin.

In one such patient, a 40-year-woman with unresectable T4bN2cM0 maxillary adenoid cystic carcinoma treated with radiation and combination chemotherapy, was admitted to the hospital for failure to thrive, weight loss, and immobility. On examination, she demonstrated mutism, posturing, limb rigidity and mild waxy flexibility, gegenhalten hypertonia, and grasp reflex.

While lorazepam (Ativan) 2 mg IV temporarily resolved her symptoms, the team was unable to achieve any sustained response to psychopharmacologic treatment. The patient responded fully to six treatments with electroconvulsive therapy and was able to complete radiation and chemotherapy, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

A second patient with profound depression had complete response to six rounds of ECT after he failed to respond to a variety of medications following resection of right temporal lesions and an anterior temporal lobectomy for multicentric glioblastoma multiforme.

Very few studies have been published of ECT in cancer patients, in large measure because of a stigma not only among members of the general public, but in medical training as well, Dr. Fernandez-Robles said.

 

 

"Jack Nicholson did for shock therapy what 'Jaws' did for sharks," he wryly paraphrased British psychiatrist Susan Benbow as saying in an allusion to the depiction of ECT in the movie "One Flew Over the Cuckoo’s Nest."

In practice, ECT can reduce emotional suffering and physical pain and can "restore capacity for enjoyment of whatever life remains to be lived," said Dr. Fernandez-Robles.

For terminally ill patients with unremitting depression, it offers hope for engagement "in the important process of saying good-byes and wrapping things up."

Adverse effects can include nausea, headache, postictal delirium, cardiovascular complications, prolonged apnea, and well-known effects on anterograde and recent retrograde memory. Indeed, patients described by Dr. Fernandez-Robles did experience memory-related side effects.

Nonetheless, he said each of the patients had "clear-cut" indications for ECT and their quality of life improved dramatically as a result of the therapy.

"I am really interested in ... the impact of serious mental illness on the quality of care we give to our patients," he said following the meeting.

Neither presenter disclosed any relevant conflicts of interest.

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EXPERT ANALYSIS FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY SOCIETY

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Insomnia Linked to Chemo, Hormone Therapy

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MIAMI – Chemotherapy and hormone therapy – but not radiation therapy – were associated with insomnia in a population study that tracked sleep patterns in nearly 1,000 cancer patients for 18 months after recruitment early in the course of their disease.

Nausea, other digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain were all associated with disturbed sleep in the study of 962 patients diagnosed with nonmetastatic cancer and recruited by the Laval University Cancer Research Center in Quebec. Of these, many patients did not receive adjuvant therapy, while some received a combination of therapies. The analysis included 224 patients who received chemotherapy, 428 patients who had radiotherapy, and 291 who received hormone therapy.

Courtesy Dr. Josée Savard
Dr. Josée Savard

The median age of the patients was 57 years, and nearly two-thirds were women. The most common cancer sites were breast (49%), prostate (27%), and gynecologic (12%).

A pronounced association between chemotherapy and insomnia was best explained by nausea (P less than .001), but also by digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain, Dr. Josée Savard, professor of psychology at the university, reported at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Night sweats, on the other hand, had the most pronounced effect (P less than.001) on insomnia in patients undergoing hormone therapy. Pain was also a highly significant contributor to sleeplessness in hormone-treated patients, said Dr. Savard.

In a previous study of the same cohort, she and her associates reported a very high rate of insomnia (59%) at baseline, the day of each patient’s preoperative visit, before active treatment had been initiated (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:3580-6).

About 1 in 7 patients experienced insomnia for the first time during cancer treatment, and nearly 20% experienced a relapse of clinically diagnosable insomnia that had occurred earlier in their lives. Over time, insomnia declined, but even at the final, 18-month time point of the natural history study, 36% of patients still reported insomnia.

Dr. Savard found that cancer patients most at risk for insomnia were women, younger patients, and those patients who had a hyperarousability trait or a personal or family history of insomnia or a psychiatric disorder. Precipitating factors included hospitalization and cancer treatment.

She cited many potential contributors to insomnia in cancer patients undergoing treatment, from anticipatory anxiety to daytime napping, which might reduce exposure to sunlight and disrupt the sleep-wake cycle.

The current study was designed to tease out the effect of various cancer treatments and treatment-specific symptoms on insomnia.

Asked why radiation therapy was not associated with insomnia, Dr. Savard suggested it has fewer side effects that might affect sleep – except in certain subsamples.

"For instance, radiation therapy for prostate cancer can lead to urinary incontinence, which may disturb sleep when occurring during nighttime. We recently found evidence for such an effect in a different longitudinal study conducted in prostate cancer patients only. It is possible that this effect was blurred in the present study because various cancer types were pooled together," she said. "Note also that the results are in the same direction for radiation therapy, although the association is not significant," she added.

Funding for the study was through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. None of the investigators had relevant financial disclosures.

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MIAMI – Chemotherapy and hormone therapy – but not radiation therapy – were associated with insomnia in a population study that tracked sleep patterns in nearly 1,000 cancer patients for 18 months after recruitment early in the course of their disease.

Nausea, other digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain were all associated with disturbed sleep in the study of 962 patients diagnosed with nonmetastatic cancer and recruited by the Laval University Cancer Research Center in Quebec. Of these, many patients did not receive adjuvant therapy, while some received a combination of therapies. The analysis included 224 patients who received chemotherapy, 428 patients who had radiotherapy, and 291 who received hormone therapy.

Courtesy Dr. Josée Savard
Dr. Josée Savard

The median age of the patients was 57 years, and nearly two-thirds were women. The most common cancer sites were breast (49%), prostate (27%), and gynecologic (12%).

A pronounced association between chemotherapy and insomnia was best explained by nausea (P less than .001), but also by digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain, Dr. Josée Savard, professor of psychology at the university, reported at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Night sweats, on the other hand, had the most pronounced effect (P less than.001) on insomnia in patients undergoing hormone therapy. Pain was also a highly significant contributor to sleeplessness in hormone-treated patients, said Dr. Savard.

In a previous study of the same cohort, she and her associates reported a very high rate of insomnia (59%) at baseline, the day of each patient’s preoperative visit, before active treatment had been initiated (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:3580-6).

About 1 in 7 patients experienced insomnia for the first time during cancer treatment, and nearly 20% experienced a relapse of clinically diagnosable insomnia that had occurred earlier in their lives. Over time, insomnia declined, but even at the final, 18-month time point of the natural history study, 36% of patients still reported insomnia.

Dr. Savard found that cancer patients most at risk for insomnia were women, younger patients, and those patients who had a hyperarousability trait or a personal or family history of insomnia or a psychiatric disorder. Precipitating factors included hospitalization and cancer treatment.

She cited many potential contributors to insomnia in cancer patients undergoing treatment, from anticipatory anxiety to daytime napping, which might reduce exposure to sunlight and disrupt the sleep-wake cycle.

The current study was designed to tease out the effect of various cancer treatments and treatment-specific symptoms on insomnia.

Asked why radiation therapy was not associated with insomnia, Dr. Savard suggested it has fewer side effects that might affect sleep – except in certain subsamples.

"For instance, radiation therapy for prostate cancer can lead to urinary incontinence, which may disturb sleep when occurring during nighttime. We recently found evidence for such an effect in a different longitudinal study conducted in prostate cancer patients only. It is possible that this effect was blurred in the present study because various cancer types were pooled together," she said. "Note also that the results are in the same direction for radiation therapy, although the association is not significant," she added.

Funding for the study was through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. None of the investigators had relevant financial disclosures.

MIAMI – Chemotherapy and hormone therapy – but not radiation therapy – were associated with insomnia in a population study that tracked sleep patterns in nearly 1,000 cancer patients for 18 months after recruitment early in the course of their disease.

Nausea, other digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain were all associated with disturbed sleep in the study of 962 patients diagnosed with nonmetastatic cancer and recruited by the Laval University Cancer Research Center in Quebec. Of these, many patients did not receive adjuvant therapy, while some received a combination of therapies. The analysis included 224 patients who received chemotherapy, 428 patients who had radiotherapy, and 291 who received hormone therapy.

Courtesy Dr. Josée Savard
Dr. Josée Savard

The median age of the patients was 57 years, and nearly two-thirds were women. The most common cancer sites were breast (49%), prostate (27%), and gynecologic (12%).

A pronounced association between chemotherapy and insomnia was best explained by nausea (P less than .001), but also by digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain, Dr. Josée Savard, professor of psychology at the university, reported at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Night sweats, on the other hand, had the most pronounced effect (P less than.001) on insomnia in patients undergoing hormone therapy. Pain was also a highly significant contributor to sleeplessness in hormone-treated patients, said Dr. Savard.

In a previous study of the same cohort, she and her associates reported a very high rate of insomnia (59%) at baseline, the day of each patient’s preoperative visit, before active treatment had been initiated (J. Clin. Oncol. 2011;29:3580-6).

About 1 in 7 patients experienced insomnia for the first time during cancer treatment, and nearly 20% experienced a relapse of clinically diagnosable insomnia that had occurred earlier in their lives. Over time, insomnia declined, but even at the final, 18-month time point of the natural history study, 36% of patients still reported insomnia.

Dr. Savard found that cancer patients most at risk for insomnia were women, younger patients, and those patients who had a hyperarousability trait or a personal or family history of insomnia or a psychiatric disorder. Precipitating factors included hospitalization and cancer treatment.

She cited many potential contributors to insomnia in cancer patients undergoing treatment, from anticipatory anxiety to daytime napping, which might reduce exposure to sunlight and disrupt the sleep-wake cycle.

The current study was designed to tease out the effect of various cancer treatments and treatment-specific symptoms on insomnia.

Asked why radiation therapy was not associated with insomnia, Dr. Savard suggested it has fewer side effects that might affect sleep – except in certain subsamples.

"For instance, radiation therapy for prostate cancer can lead to urinary incontinence, which may disturb sleep when occurring during nighttime. We recently found evidence for such an effect in a different longitudinal study conducted in prostate cancer patients only. It is possible that this effect was blurred in the present study because various cancer types were pooled together," she said. "Note also that the results are in the same direction for radiation therapy, although the association is not significant," she added.

Funding for the study was through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. None of the investigators had relevant financial disclosures.

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Major Finding: A pronounced association between chemotherapy and insomnia was best explained by nausea (P less than .001), but also by digestive symptoms, night sweats, and pain.

Data Source: Investigators conducted a population-based study of 962 patients with nonmetastatic cancer.

Disclosures: Funding for the study was through the Canadian Institutes of Health Research. None of the investigators had relevant financial disclosures.

Oncologists Favor Psychosocial Care, But Give It Short Shrift

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MIAMI – Oncologists endorse the idea of connecting cancer patients to psychosocial care at the conclusion of active treatment. But practice doesn’t align with beliefs, perhaps because they are unfamiliar with where to refer their patients for care.

Among 57 oncologists who responded to a survey in the southeastern United States, 35, or 61%, considered psychosocial care to be beneficial. A majority thought it was "important" following cancer treatment, reported Laurie Freeman-Gibb at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society (APOS).

But the oncologists said they spent just 4.2 minutes, on average, discussing psychosocial care during consultations, according to Ms. Freeman-Gibb, a lecturer in the department of nursing at the University of Windsor in Ontario, and her colleague Dr. Andrew Hatchett, Ph.D., of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette’s department of kinesiology.

And since only about 1 in 6 oncologists responded to the survey – it was sent to 350 practitioners – the findings may present an overly optimistic picture of what happens in real-life practice when a patient leaves active treatment and returns to the community for care.

"I think it’s sometimes a time constraint," said Ms. Freeman-Gibb. "If you only have 20 minutes to see this person and you open the floodgates to what’s really going on, you might never get out the door ... especially if you don’t know whom to tell the patient to call."

Dr. Hatchett said the impetus for the study was a series of conversations he had with survivors, in which they seemed to indicate a "disconnect" in support after their active treatment ended. "It seemed as though after treatment the survivor was left to their own devices to acquire any additional help," he said.

Many oncologists told the researchers that they would like to refer survivors for follow-up psychosocial care, but they don’t know what’s available, the investigators said.

No comprehensive registry exists that would outline the locations and qualifications of therapists, exercise and rehabilitation specialists, and support agencies that specialize in the psychosocial needs of cancer survivors. In Ireland, a national registry does just that, detailing not only the services available but also their cost, said Ms. Freeman-Gibb.

The organization that sponsored the meeting, APOS, offers a free helpline intended to connect cancer patients and survivors with community counseling services and other sources of support. However, the oncologists in the survey were unaware of that resource, the investigators noted.

Development of a "network of resources" remains a goal of the researchers, who plan to conduct an expanded online survey of a larger pool of oncologists to build on the findings of their pilot questionnaire.

Having a better sense of available resources might make oncologists more comfortable bringing up survivors’ psychosocial adjustment, added Ms. Freeman-Gibb: "Their attitude is great. They say they would love to refer patients. But they don’t."

No outside funding was used to conduct the study.

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MIAMI – Oncologists endorse the idea of connecting cancer patients to psychosocial care at the conclusion of active treatment. But practice doesn’t align with beliefs, perhaps because they are unfamiliar with where to refer their patients for care.

Among 57 oncologists who responded to a survey in the southeastern United States, 35, or 61%, considered psychosocial care to be beneficial. A majority thought it was "important" following cancer treatment, reported Laurie Freeman-Gibb at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society (APOS).

But the oncologists said they spent just 4.2 minutes, on average, discussing psychosocial care during consultations, according to Ms. Freeman-Gibb, a lecturer in the department of nursing at the University of Windsor in Ontario, and her colleague Dr. Andrew Hatchett, Ph.D., of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette’s department of kinesiology.

And since only about 1 in 6 oncologists responded to the survey – it was sent to 350 practitioners – the findings may present an overly optimistic picture of what happens in real-life practice when a patient leaves active treatment and returns to the community for care.

"I think it’s sometimes a time constraint," said Ms. Freeman-Gibb. "If you only have 20 minutes to see this person and you open the floodgates to what’s really going on, you might never get out the door ... especially if you don’t know whom to tell the patient to call."

Dr. Hatchett said the impetus for the study was a series of conversations he had with survivors, in which they seemed to indicate a "disconnect" in support after their active treatment ended. "It seemed as though after treatment the survivor was left to their own devices to acquire any additional help," he said.

Many oncologists told the researchers that they would like to refer survivors for follow-up psychosocial care, but they don’t know what’s available, the investigators said.

No comprehensive registry exists that would outline the locations and qualifications of therapists, exercise and rehabilitation specialists, and support agencies that specialize in the psychosocial needs of cancer survivors. In Ireland, a national registry does just that, detailing not only the services available but also their cost, said Ms. Freeman-Gibb.

The organization that sponsored the meeting, APOS, offers a free helpline intended to connect cancer patients and survivors with community counseling services and other sources of support. However, the oncologists in the survey were unaware of that resource, the investigators noted.

Development of a "network of resources" remains a goal of the researchers, who plan to conduct an expanded online survey of a larger pool of oncologists to build on the findings of their pilot questionnaire.

Having a better sense of available resources might make oncologists more comfortable bringing up survivors’ psychosocial adjustment, added Ms. Freeman-Gibb: "Their attitude is great. They say they would love to refer patients. But they don’t."

No outside funding was used to conduct the study.

MIAMI – Oncologists endorse the idea of connecting cancer patients to psychosocial care at the conclusion of active treatment. But practice doesn’t align with beliefs, perhaps because they are unfamiliar with where to refer their patients for care.

Among 57 oncologists who responded to a survey in the southeastern United States, 35, or 61%, considered psychosocial care to be beneficial. A majority thought it was "important" following cancer treatment, reported Laurie Freeman-Gibb at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society (APOS).

But the oncologists said they spent just 4.2 minutes, on average, discussing psychosocial care during consultations, according to Ms. Freeman-Gibb, a lecturer in the department of nursing at the University of Windsor in Ontario, and her colleague Dr. Andrew Hatchett, Ph.D., of the University of Louisiana at Lafayette’s department of kinesiology.

And since only about 1 in 6 oncologists responded to the survey – it was sent to 350 practitioners – the findings may present an overly optimistic picture of what happens in real-life practice when a patient leaves active treatment and returns to the community for care.

"I think it’s sometimes a time constraint," said Ms. Freeman-Gibb. "If you only have 20 minutes to see this person and you open the floodgates to what’s really going on, you might never get out the door ... especially if you don’t know whom to tell the patient to call."

Dr. Hatchett said the impetus for the study was a series of conversations he had with survivors, in which they seemed to indicate a "disconnect" in support after their active treatment ended. "It seemed as though after treatment the survivor was left to their own devices to acquire any additional help," he said.

Many oncologists told the researchers that they would like to refer survivors for follow-up psychosocial care, but they don’t know what’s available, the investigators said.

No comprehensive registry exists that would outline the locations and qualifications of therapists, exercise and rehabilitation specialists, and support agencies that specialize in the psychosocial needs of cancer survivors. In Ireland, a national registry does just that, detailing not only the services available but also their cost, said Ms. Freeman-Gibb.

The organization that sponsored the meeting, APOS, offers a free helpline intended to connect cancer patients and survivors with community counseling services and other sources of support. However, the oncologists in the survey were unaware of that resource, the investigators noted.

Development of a "network of resources" remains a goal of the researchers, who plan to conduct an expanded online survey of a larger pool of oncologists to build on the findings of their pilot questionnaire.

Having a better sense of available resources might make oncologists more comfortable bringing up survivors’ psychosocial adjustment, added Ms. Freeman-Gibb: "Their attitude is great. They say they would love to refer patients. But they don’t."

No outside funding was used to conduct the study.

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Prostate Cancer Survivors Avoid Therapy for Sexual Side Effects

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MIAMI – Faced with erectile dysfunction following prostate cancer surgery, many men adopt an avoidant coping style that inadvertently interferes with rehabilitation efforts to spare them long-term sexual side effects.

"We have ways of helping men to get their erections back; that isn’t the issue," Christian J. Nelson, Ph.D., said at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"The issue is, men avoid and drop out of rehabilitation programs."

Avoidance was one key theme raised by 35 men who had undergone radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer 2-3 years prior to being recruited into focus groups by Dr. Nelson and his colleagues as an initial step in devising a more effective approach to erectile dysfunction (ED) rehabilitation. He presented results of a systematic analysis of those themes at the meeting, and offered a preview of the ongoing study that resulted.

Dr. Nelson described a cycle in which men experienced frustration, shame, and embarrassment over ED during a sexual experience following surgery, then began avoiding intimate contact due to anxiety. Relationship issues, depression, and increased frustration often followed.

"It’s absolutely devastating," one focus group participant told him.

Another remarked, "It’s like the ground you walked on since you were a teenager is gone."

Rather than seek help, many men acknowledged that they dealt with ED by withdrawing emotionally, sidestepping the potential for intimacy.

"Doc, it’s fear. It’s fear, Doc," another participant told Dr. Nelson.

"Men are struggling [on average] for about 2 years before they actually pursue treatment," said Dr. Nelson, a psychologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Ideally, he explained, ED rehabilitation should begin as soon as possible after surgery to maintain blood flow and muscle tone, and "biology dictates the best treatment."

A common, but temporary, effect of nerve-sparing surgery is not only ED, but also stretching of the nerves responsible for the nitric oxide release triggered by oral phosphodiesterase inhibitor drugs. Pills such as sildenafil (Viagra) and taldenafil (Cialis) are effective in only about 20% of men following surgery, so after a brief trial injection therapy is recommended for the maintenance of erections over the 18-24 months that it may take to recover what erectile function remains.

In addition to the barrier of avoidance, men adamantly complained to focus group researchers that they were not properly told before surgery about postsurgical side effects, including ED and its treatments.

"It was ... Theme One ... and clearly the most predominant theme [in the focus groups]," said Dr. Nelson. "We don’t know if surgeons are telling patients about side effects, and they [patients] are thinking about the surgery and just not hearing the information – or whether the surgeons are not giving the information. But clearly, there was a lot of frustration and anger."

While men said they found the idea of penile injections "freakish and barbaric," they did not find them as painful as they had feared. Some saw the long-term benefits of injection therapy to be worth their initial reluctance, but one remarked, "This is the most humiliating thing I’ve ever done in my life."

Considering the trend to diagnose and treat earlier-stage prostate cancer in younger men, combined with an 85% prevalence of ED 4 years post surgery, "it’s an important survivorship issue," Dr. Nelson said.

Drawing from focus group findings, he and his team were encouraged by men’s humor in discussing difficult and awkward topics, offering a potential guidepost for future interventions. He also said men were "not overly enthusiastic" about the proposed idea of psychological interventions during rehabilitation, but advised that such efforts might be better accepted if they were characterized as "coaching."

Indeed, Dr. Nelson and his colleagues drew on the focus group findings to launch a randomized controlled trial of an intervention based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, a psychological orientation that encourages participants to define values that are important to them. Over time, the goal is to learn to tolerate distress and overcome barriers in order to achieve goals associated with those prized values, Dr. Nelson explained.

Enrollment in the trial has commenced, and a handful of participants in each group have completed the intervention (or a control condition) during injection training for ED.

"An initial peek at the data looks promising," he said.

Funding for the study was provided through a grant from the National Cancer Institute.

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MIAMI – Faced with erectile dysfunction following prostate cancer surgery, many men adopt an avoidant coping style that inadvertently interferes with rehabilitation efforts to spare them long-term sexual side effects.

"We have ways of helping men to get their erections back; that isn’t the issue," Christian J. Nelson, Ph.D., said at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"The issue is, men avoid and drop out of rehabilitation programs."

Avoidance was one key theme raised by 35 men who had undergone radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer 2-3 years prior to being recruited into focus groups by Dr. Nelson and his colleagues as an initial step in devising a more effective approach to erectile dysfunction (ED) rehabilitation. He presented results of a systematic analysis of those themes at the meeting, and offered a preview of the ongoing study that resulted.

Dr. Nelson described a cycle in which men experienced frustration, shame, and embarrassment over ED during a sexual experience following surgery, then began avoiding intimate contact due to anxiety. Relationship issues, depression, and increased frustration often followed.

"It’s absolutely devastating," one focus group participant told him.

Another remarked, "It’s like the ground you walked on since you were a teenager is gone."

Rather than seek help, many men acknowledged that they dealt with ED by withdrawing emotionally, sidestepping the potential for intimacy.

"Doc, it’s fear. It’s fear, Doc," another participant told Dr. Nelson.

"Men are struggling [on average] for about 2 years before they actually pursue treatment," said Dr. Nelson, a psychologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Ideally, he explained, ED rehabilitation should begin as soon as possible after surgery to maintain blood flow and muscle tone, and "biology dictates the best treatment."

A common, but temporary, effect of nerve-sparing surgery is not only ED, but also stretching of the nerves responsible for the nitric oxide release triggered by oral phosphodiesterase inhibitor drugs. Pills such as sildenafil (Viagra) and taldenafil (Cialis) are effective in only about 20% of men following surgery, so after a brief trial injection therapy is recommended for the maintenance of erections over the 18-24 months that it may take to recover what erectile function remains.

In addition to the barrier of avoidance, men adamantly complained to focus group researchers that they were not properly told before surgery about postsurgical side effects, including ED and its treatments.

"It was ... Theme One ... and clearly the most predominant theme [in the focus groups]," said Dr. Nelson. "We don’t know if surgeons are telling patients about side effects, and they [patients] are thinking about the surgery and just not hearing the information – or whether the surgeons are not giving the information. But clearly, there was a lot of frustration and anger."

While men said they found the idea of penile injections "freakish and barbaric," they did not find them as painful as they had feared. Some saw the long-term benefits of injection therapy to be worth their initial reluctance, but one remarked, "This is the most humiliating thing I’ve ever done in my life."

Considering the trend to diagnose and treat earlier-stage prostate cancer in younger men, combined with an 85% prevalence of ED 4 years post surgery, "it’s an important survivorship issue," Dr. Nelson said.

Drawing from focus group findings, he and his team were encouraged by men’s humor in discussing difficult and awkward topics, offering a potential guidepost for future interventions. He also said men were "not overly enthusiastic" about the proposed idea of psychological interventions during rehabilitation, but advised that such efforts might be better accepted if they were characterized as "coaching."

Indeed, Dr. Nelson and his colleagues drew on the focus group findings to launch a randomized controlled trial of an intervention based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, a psychological orientation that encourages participants to define values that are important to them. Over time, the goal is to learn to tolerate distress and overcome barriers in order to achieve goals associated with those prized values, Dr. Nelson explained.

Enrollment in the trial has commenced, and a handful of participants in each group have completed the intervention (or a control condition) during injection training for ED.

"An initial peek at the data looks promising," he said.

Funding for the study was provided through a grant from the National Cancer Institute.

MIAMI – Faced with erectile dysfunction following prostate cancer surgery, many men adopt an avoidant coping style that inadvertently interferes with rehabilitation efforts to spare them long-term sexual side effects.

"We have ways of helping men to get their erections back; that isn’t the issue," Christian J. Nelson, Ph.D., said at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"The issue is, men avoid and drop out of rehabilitation programs."

Avoidance was one key theme raised by 35 men who had undergone radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer 2-3 years prior to being recruited into focus groups by Dr. Nelson and his colleagues as an initial step in devising a more effective approach to erectile dysfunction (ED) rehabilitation. He presented results of a systematic analysis of those themes at the meeting, and offered a preview of the ongoing study that resulted.

Dr. Nelson described a cycle in which men experienced frustration, shame, and embarrassment over ED during a sexual experience following surgery, then began avoiding intimate contact due to anxiety. Relationship issues, depression, and increased frustration often followed.

"It’s absolutely devastating," one focus group participant told him.

Another remarked, "It’s like the ground you walked on since you were a teenager is gone."

Rather than seek help, many men acknowledged that they dealt with ED by withdrawing emotionally, sidestepping the potential for intimacy.

"Doc, it’s fear. It’s fear, Doc," another participant told Dr. Nelson.

"Men are struggling [on average] for about 2 years before they actually pursue treatment," said Dr. Nelson, a psychologist at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York.

Ideally, he explained, ED rehabilitation should begin as soon as possible after surgery to maintain blood flow and muscle tone, and "biology dictates the best treatment."

A common, but temporary, effect of nerve-sparing surgery is not only ED, but also stretching of the nerves responsible for the nitric oxide release triggered by oral phosphodiesterase inhibitor drugs. Pills such as sildenafil (Viagra) and taldenafil (Cialis) are effective in only about 20% of men following surgery, so after a brief trial injection therapy is recommended for the maintenance of erections over the 18-24 months that it may take to recover what erectile function remains.

In addition to the barrier of avoidance, men adamantly complained to focus group researchers that they were not properly told before surgery about postsurgical side effects, including ED and its treatments.

"It was ... Theme One ... and clearly the most predominant theme [in the focus groups]," said Dr. Nelson. "We don’t know if surgeons are telling patients about side effects, and they [patients] are thinking about the surgery and just not hearing the information – or whether the surgeons are not giving the information. But clearly, there was a lot of frustration and anger."

While men said they found the idea of penile injections "freakish and barbaric," they did not find them as painful as they had feared. Some saw the long-term benefits of injection therapy to be worth their initial reluctance, but one remarked, "This is the most humiliating thing I’ve ever done in my life."

Considering the trend to diagnose and treat earlier-stage prostate cancer in younger men, combined with an 85% prevalence of ED 4 years post surgery, "it’s an important survivorship issue," Dr. Nelson said.

Drawing from focus group findings, he and his team were encouraged by men’s humor in discussing difficult and awkward topics, offering a potential guidepost for future interventions. He also said men were "not overly enthusiastic" about the proposed idea of psychological interventions during rehabilitation, but advised that such efforts might be better accepted if they were characterized as "coaching."

Indeed, Dr. Nelson and his colleagues drew on the focus group findings to launch a randomized controlled trial of an intervention based on Acceptance and Commitment Therapy, a psychological orientation that encourages participants to define values that are important to them. Over time, the goal is to learn to tolerate distress and overcome barriers in order to achieve goals associated with those prized values, Dr. Nelson explained.

Enrollment in the trial has commenced, and a handful of participants in each group have completed the intervention (or a control condition) during injection training for ED.

"An initial peek at the data looks promising," he said.

Funding for the study was provided through a grant from the National Cancer Institute.

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Lung Cancer Trauma Leads to Emotional Growth

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MIAMI – Well over a third of non–small cell lung cancer patients met clinically diagnostic criteria for distress, but many of the same patients also demonstrated positive mental health outcomes in the form of posttraumatic growth, a University of Kentucky study showed.

The seemingly paradoxical results may suggest that the most troubled cancer patients have the most to gain from the experience of learning how to cope, audience members suggested at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Cancer Society, where the findings were presented.

"We know from a theoretical standpoint that in order to grow, you have to have distress," agreed Michael Andrykowski, Ph.D., of the University of Kentucky, Lexington, primary investigator of the study of distress and posttraumatic growth in 189 survivors of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Patients recruited from a statewide Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) registry completed a series of questionnaires a median 15.5 months following their diagnosis.

Younger patients and those diagnosed with metastatic disease were most likely to be among the 37% who met the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) threshold for traumatic stress.

"As we anticipated, these survivors had poorer outcomes on distress [measures], on average two-thirds of a standard deviation. I think we agree that’s a clinically important difference," said Dr. Andrykowski.

What was not expected was that the same distressed survivors also demonstrated more posttraumatic growth – a term used to describe positive psychological change arising from hardship – than less-troubled survivors, he noted.

The mean effect size of posttraumatic growth between groups – traumatized vs. less-traumatized survivors, was .42, with the most distressed survivors reporting more improvement in personal relationships, personal strength, and spirituality.

Dr. Andrykowski suggested that the results may indicate that distress and growth are two separate and independent dimensions of adjustment, rather than opposite extremes on a continuum. In other words, someone could simultaneously be quite distressed by the cancer experience, and also experiencing meaningful insight into life’s priorities, connection to others, and the power of resiliency.

Intriguingly, clinically distressed survivors enrolled also reported less connection to mental health resources that would be assumed to be helpful in nurturing posttraumatic growth, such as a supportive social environment, a sense of optimism, and belief in their own efficacy.

"That’s something that I’m wrestling with and puzzled by," said Dr. Andrykowski.

He noted that data are still being collected on potential mediators that might offer clues as to how the most traumatized patients were able to grow as a result of their experience.

In the future, a longitudinal study tracking distress and posttraumatic growth over time might be able to track the origins of positive adjustment arising from an otherwise traumatic and difficult experience, he said.

Funding for the study was through a variety of federal grants. Rachel Steffens, a teaching assistant at the University of Kentucky, was coauthor. Neither investigator reported any relevant financial conflicts of interest.

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MIAMI – Well over a third of non–small cell lung cancer patients met clinically diagnostic criteria for distress, but many of the same patients also demonstrated positive mental health outcomes in the form of posttraumatic growth, a University of Kentucky study showed.

The seemingly paradoxical results may suggest that the most troubled cancer patients have the most to gain from the experience of learning how to cope, audience members suggested at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Cancer Society, where the findings were presented.

"We know from a theoretical standpoint that in order to grow, you have to have distress," agreed Michael Andrykowski, Ph.D., of the University of Kentucky, Lexington, primary investigator of the study of distress and posttraumatic growth in 189 survivors of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Patients recruited from a statewide Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) registry completed a series of questionnaires a median 15.5 months following their diagnosis.

Younger patients and those diagnosed with metastatic disease were most likely to be among the 37% who met the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) threshold for traumatic stress.

"As we anticipated, these survivors had poorer outcomes on distress [measures], on average two-thirds of a standard deviation. I think we agree that’s a clinically important difference," said Dr. Andrykowski.

What was not expected was that the same distressed survivors also demonstrated more posttraumatic growth – a term used to describe positive psychological change arising from hardship – than less-troubled survivors, he noted.

The mean effect size of posttraumatic growth between groups – traumatized vs. less-traumatized survivors, was .42, with the most distressed survivors reporting more improvement in personal relationships, personal strength, and spirituality.

Dr. Andrykowski suggested that the results may indicate that distress and growth are two separate and independent dimensions of adjustment, rather than opposite extremes on a continuum. In other words, someone could simultaneously be quite distressed by the cancer experience, and also experiencing meaningful insight into life’s priorities, connection to others, and the power of resiliency.

Intriguingly, clinically distressed survivors enrolled also reported less connection to mental health resources that would be assumed to be helpful in nurturing posttraumatic growth, such as a supportive social environment, a sense of optimism, and belief in their own efficacy.

"That’s something that I’m wrestling with and puzzled by," said Dr. Andrykowski.

He noted that data are still being collected on potential mediators that might offer clues as to how the most traumatized patients were able to grow as a result of their experience.

In the future, a longitudinal study tracking distress and posttraumatic growth over time might be able to track the origins of positive adjustment arising from an otherwise traumatic and difficult experience, he said.

Funding for the study was through a variety of federal grants. Rachel Steffens, a teaching assistant at the University of Kentucky, was coauthor. Neither investigator reported any relevant financial conflicts of interest.

MIAMI – Well over a third of non–small cell lung cancer patients met clinically diagnostic criteria for distress, but many of the same patients also demonstrated positive mental health outcomes in the form of posttraumatic growth, a University of Kentucky study showed.

The seemingly paradoxical results may suggest that the most troubled cancer patients have the most to gain from the experience of learning how to cope, audience members suggested at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Cancer Society, where the findings were presented.

"We know from a theoretical standpoint that in order to grow, you have to have distress," agreed Michael Andrykowski, Ph.D., of the University of Kentucky, Lexington, primary investigator of the study of distress and posttraumatic growth in 189 survivors of non–small cell lung cancer (NSCLC).

Patients recruited from a statewide Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) registry completed a series of questionnaires a median 15.5 months following their diagnosis.

Younger patients and those diagnosed with metastatic disease were most likely to be among the 37% who met the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, Fourth Edition (DSM-IV) threshold for traumatic stress.

"As we anticipated, these survivors had poorer outcomes on distress [measures], on average two-thirds of a standard deviation. I think we agree that’s a clinically important difference," said Dr. Andrykowski.

What was not expected was that the same distressed survivors also demonstrated more posttraumatic growth – a term used to describe positive psychological change arising from hardship – than less-troubled survivors, he noted.

The mean effect size of posttraumatic growth between groups – traumatized vs. less-traumatized survivors, was .42, with the most distressed survivors reporting more improvement in personal relationships, personal strength, and spirituality.

Dr. Andrykowski suggested that the results may indicate that distress and growth are two separate and independent dimensions of adjustment, rather than opposite extremes on a continuum. In other words, someone could simultaneously be quite distressed by the cancer experience, and also experiencing meaningful insight into life’s priorities, connection to others, and the power of resiliency.

Intriguingly, clinically distressed survivors enrolled also reported less connection to mental health resources that would be assumed to be helpful in nurturing posttraumatic growth, such as a supportive social environment, a sense of optimism, and belief in their own efficacy.

"That’s something that I’m wrestling with and puzzled by," said Dr. Andrykowski.

He noted that data are still being collected on potential mediators that might offer clues as to how the most traumatized patients were able to grow as a result of their experience.

In the future, a longitudinal study tracking distress and posttraumatic growth over time might be able to track the origins of positive adjustment arising from an otherwise traumatic and difficult experience, he said.

Funding for the study was through a variety of federal grants. Rachel Steffens, a teaching assistant at the University of Kentucky, was coauthor. Neither investigator reported any relevant financial conflicts of interest.

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Major Finding: More than a third – 37% – of patients with non–small cell lung cancer met the DSM-IV threshold for traumatic stress.

Data Source: Investigators analyzed questionnaires completed by 189 survivors of non–small cell lung cancer.

Disclosures: Funding was through a variety of federal grants. Neither investigator reported any relevant financial conflicts of interest.

Hispanic Cancer Patients Suffer More Pain, Severe Sadness

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MIAMI – Hispanic patients reported significantly higher rates of pain, numbness, cognition difficulties, vomiting, and severe sadness than non-Hispanics in a survey of 622 cancer patients awaiting appointments at three hospitals in the Bronx, New York City’s poorest borough.

"Hispanic patients consistently reported more emotional and practical complaints contributing to overall distress," Katie O'Callaghan reported at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"These are alarming results for us," she said.

Outpatients interviewed for the survey roughly reflected the demographics of the Bronx, a highly diverse, densely populated county where 5,000 new cancer cases are diagnosed each year. They were approached at Montefiore, Jacobi, and Lincoln hospitals.

With a mean age of 58 years (range, 18-100), the group included non-Hispanic whites (15%), African Americans (32%), and Hispanics (45%) with family origins in Mexico, the Caribbean, and South and Central America. Nearly three-quarters, 73%, were women. The most common cancers were breast (29%), gynecologic (14%), hematologic (10%), colorectal (9%), lung (7%), and prostate (3%).

Ms. O’Callaghan, research coordinator at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that among 256 Hispanics who completed the oral survey, 51% were Spanish-language dominant, reporting little or no English fluency. Communication barriers might be one explanation for the marked disparity in reports of physical symptoms, she suggested.

Indeed, on some measures, differences were seen between Hispanic patients who spoke English and those who did not. For example, 64% of Spanish-dominant Hispanics reported fatigue, compared with 49% of English-dominant Hispanic patients, a significant difference (P less than .05).

Spanish-dominant Hispanic patients also reported more practical problems (such as housing, transportation, and child care problems) as contributors to their distress (P less than .05).

But major differences persisted among the ethnic groups surveyed.

Overall, the same percentage – 49.5% – of Hispanic and white patients expressed clinically significant levels of distress – a composite measure that consists of 34 physical, practical, emotional, and spiritual/religious factors – compared with 42.5% of African Americans.

But 45% of Hispanic patients reported moderate to severe pain, more than twice the percentage of whites (20%) and substantially more than African Americans (37%). The differences among the three ethnic groups were significant (P less than .01).

Moderate to severe problems with cognition were reported by similar percentages of African Americans and whites (20% and 19%), but 31% of Hispanics, a difference significant at the P less than .05 level.

Sadness was reported as moderate to severe by 41% of Hispanics, and was significantly more distressful than in non-Hispanics in the survey (P less than .05). Again, about equal percentages of whites and African Americans reported great sadness (31% and 29%).

Divergence by ethnicity also was seen for moderate to severe numbness (reported by 39% of Hispanics, 30% of African Americans, and 20% of whites) and moderate to severe vomiting (reported by 13% of Hispanics and 8% of African Americans, but only 1% of whites).

"This psychological assessment study gives voice to the needs of Hispanic cancer patients who demonstrate greater distress and oncology symptoms [than other groups]," Ms. O’Callaghan said.

The silver lining in the study, she noted, was that Hispanic patients were also more likely than non-Hispanic patients, 26% vs. 21%, to be interested in receiving counseling for their emotional problems.

Coauthor Alyson B. Moadel, Ph.D., director of psychosocial oncology at the Albert Einstein Cancer Center, highlighted "a very big effort ... in terms of quality improvement," in part in response to the study findings.

One specific intervention is a volunteer companion program offering one-to-one support for cancer patients as they receive treatment for cancer, Dr. Moadel said, after Ms. O’Callaghan’s presentation at the meeting.

The study was funded by the Entertainment Industry Foundation; none of the authors reported any relevant financial disclosures.

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MIAMI – Hispanic patients reported significantly higher rates of pain, numbness, cognition difficulties, vomiting, and severe sadness than non-Hispanics in a survey of 622 cancer patients awaiting appointments at three hospitals in the Bronx, New York City’s poorest borough.

"Hispanic patients consistently reported more emotional and practical complaints contributing to overall distress," Katie O'Callaghan reported at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"These are alarming results for us," she said.

Outpatients interviewed for the survey roughly reflected the demographics of the Bronx, a highly diverse, densely populated county where 5,000 new cancer cases are diagnosed each year. They were approached at Montefiore, Jacobi, and Lincoln hospitals.

With a mean age of 58 years (range, 18-100), the group included non-Hispanic whites (15%), African Americans (32%), and Hispanics (45%) with family origins in Mexico, the Caribbean, and South and Central America. Nearly three-quarters, 73%, were women. The most common cancers were breast (29%), gynecologic (14%), hematologic (10%), colorectal (9%), lung (7%), and prostate (3%).

Ms. O’Callaghan, research coordinator at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that among 256 Hispanics who completed the oral survey, 51% were Spanish-language dominant, reporting little or no English fluency. Communication barriers might be one explanation for the marked disparity in reports of physical symptoms, she suggested.

Indeed, on some measures, differences were seen between Hispanic patients who spoke English and those who did not. For example, 64% of Spanish-dominant Hispanics reported fatigue, compared with 49% of English-dominant Hispanic patients, a significant difference (P less than .05).

Spanish-dominant Hispanic patients also reported more practical problems (such as housing, transportation, and child care problems) as contributors to their distress (P less than .05).

But major differences persisted among the ethnic groups surveyed.

Overall, the same percentage – 49.5% – of Hispanic and white patients expressed clinically significant levels of distress – a composite measure that consists of 34 physical, practical, emotional, and spiritual/religious factors – compared with 42.5% of African Americans.

But 45% of Hispanic patients reported moderate to severe pain, more than twice the percentage of whites (20%) and substantially more than African Americans (37%). The differences among the three ethnic groups were significant (P less than .01).

Moderate to severe problems with cognition were reported by similar percentages of African Americans and whites (20% and 19%), but 31% of Hispanics, a difference significant at the P less than .05 level.

Sadness was reported as moderate to severe by 41% of Hispanics, and was significantly more distressful than in non-Hispanics in the survey (P less than .05). Again, about equal percentages of whites and African Americans reported great sadness (31% and 29%).

Divergence by ethnicity also was seen for moderate to severe numbness (reported by 39% of Hispanics, 30% of African Americans, and 20% of whites) and moderate to severe vomiting (reported by 13% of Hispanics and 8% of African Americans, but only 1% of whites).

"This psychological assessment study gives voice to the needs of Hispanic cancer patients who demonstrate greater distress and oncology symptoms [than other groups]," Ms. O’Callaghan said.

The silver lining in the study, she noted, was that Hispanic patients were also more likely than non-Hispanic patients, 26% vs. 21%, to be interested in receiving counseling for their emotional problems.

Coauthor Alyson B. Moadel, Ph.D., director of psychosocial oncology at the Albert Einstein Cancer Center, highlighted "a very big effort ... in terms of quality improvement," in part in response to the study findings.

One specific intervention is a volunteer companion program offering one-to-one support for cancer patients as they receive treatment for cancer, Dr. Moadel said, after Ms. O’Callaghan’s presentation at the meeting.

The study was funded by the Entertainment Industry Foundation; none of the authors reported any relevant financial disclosures.

MIAMI – Hispanic patients reported significantly higher rates of pain, numbness, cognition difficulties, vomiting, and severe sadness than non-Hispanics in a survey of 622 cancer patients awaiting appointments at three hospitals in the Bronx, New York City’s poorest borough.

"Hispanic patients consistently reported more emotional and practical complaints contributing to overall distress," Katie O'Callaghan reported at the annual meeting of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

"These are alarming results for us," she said.

Outpatients interviewed for the survey roughly reflected the demographics of the Bronx, a highly diverse, densely populated county where 5,000 new cancer cases are diagnosed each year. They were approached at Montefiore, Jacobi, and Lincoln hospitals.

With a mean age of 58 years (range, 18-100), the group included non-Hispanic whites (15%), African Americans (32%), and Hispanics (45%) with family origins in Mexico, the Caribbean, and South and Central America. Nearly three-quarters, 73%, were women. The most common cancers were breast (29%), gynecologic (14%), hematologic (10%), colorectal (9%), lung (7%), and prostate (3%).

Ms. O’Callaghan, research coordinator at Albert Einstein College of Medicine, New York, noted that among 256 Hispanics who completed the oral survey, 51% were Spanish-language dominant, reporting little or no English fluency. Communication barriers might be one explanation for the marked disparity in reports of physical symptoms, she suggested.

Indeed, on some measures, differences were seen between Hispanic patients who spoke English and those who did not. For example, 64% of Spanish-dominant Hispanics reported fatigue, compared with 49% of English-dominant Hispanic patients, a significant difference (P less than .05).

Spanish-dominant Hispanic patients also reported more practical problems (such as housing, transportation, and child care problems) as contributors to their distress (P less than .05).

But major differences persisted among the ethnic groups surveyed.

Overall, the same percentage – 49.5% – of Hispanic and white patients expressed clinically significant levels of distress – a composite measure that consists of 34 physical, practical, emotional, and spiritual/religious factors – compared with 42.5% of African Americans.

But 45% of Hispanic patients reported moderate to severe pain, more than twice the percentage of whites (20%) and substantially more than African Americans (37%). The differences among the three ethnic groups were significant (P less than .01).

Moderate to severe problems with cognition were reported by similar percentages of African Americans and whites (20% and 19%), but 31% of Hispanics, a difference significant at the P less than .05 level.

Sadness was reported as moderate to severe by 41% of Hispanics, and was significantly more distressful than in non-Hispanics in the survey (P less than .05). Again, about equal percentages of whites and African Americans reported great sadness (31% and 29%).

Divergence by ethnicity also was seen for moderate to severe numbness (reported by 39% of Hispanics, 30% of African Americans, and 20% of whites) and moderate to severe vomiting (reported by 13% of Hispanics and 8% of African Americans, but only 1% of whites).

"This psychological assessment study gives voice to the needs of Hispanic cancer patients who demonstrate greater distress and oncology symptoms [than other groups]," Ms. O’Callaghan said.

The silver lining in the study, she noted, was that Hispanic patients were also more likely than non-Hispanic patients, 26% vs. 21%, to be interested in receiving counseling for their emotional problems.

Coauthor Alyson B. Moadel, Ph.D., director of psychosocial oncology at the Albert Einstein Cancer Center, highlighted "a very big effort ... in terms of quality improvement," in part in response to the study findings.

One specific intervention is a volunteer companion program offering one-to-one support for cancer patients as they receive treatment for cancer, Dr. Moadel said, after Ms. O’Callaghan’s presentation at the meeting.

The study was funded by the Entertainment Industry Foundation; none of the authors reported any relevant financial disclosures.

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FROM THE ANNUAL MEETING OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY SOCIETY

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Major Finding: Fully 45% of Hispanic patients reported moderate to severe pain, compared with 20% of whites, and 37% of African Americans (P less than .01).

Data Source: Investigators surveyed 622 cancer patients awaiting appointments at three hospitals in the Bronx.

Disclosures: The study was funded by the Entertainment Industry Foundation; none of the authors reported any relevant financial disclosures.

Study: Myeloma Survival Gains, but QOL Slides

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MIAMI – Patients who are diagnosed with multiple myeloma can expect to live longer than in the past, but their symptom burden remains considerable for at least 10 years after diagnosis, a prospective, population-based, Dutch study has concluded.

"The symptom burden is not only caused by the disease itself but also by the new aggressive treatments," said Floortje Mols, Ph.D., of Tilburg (the Netherlands) University at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Dr. Floortje Mols

Dr. Mols and her coauthors identified multiple myeloma patients in the Eindhoven (the Netherlands) Cancer Registry who had been diagnosed during 1999-2010 in that country. They surveyed the survivors twice – at baseline and a year later – along with an age- and sex-matched population-based cohort.

At baseline, 156 survivors reported significantly lower scores than did the control group on every subscale of the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire), a validated instrument that has been used in more than 3,000 published studies. No significant differences were seen in symptom and quality of life scores between short-term (defined as up to 5 years) and long-term (more than 5 years) survivors, she reported.

Physical functioning, fatigue, and dyspnea scores diverged from those in the controls most strikingly, but the difference was statistically significant for every subscale with P scores of less than 0.01 and beyond, said Dr. Mols, a medical psychologist at the university’s center of research on psychology in somatic diseases and the Comprehensive Cancer Centre South, Eindhoven.

In addition, multiple myeloma survivors reported a high rate of disease-specific symptoms, including tingling and numbness, pain, and drowsiness – even years beyond diagnosis. Peripheral neuropathy is a common side effect of therapy for multiple myeloma.

At baseline, 37% of short- and long-term survivors reported worrying about their health during the previous week, 34% reported worrying about their disease, and 21% reported worrying "very much or quite a bit" about dying.

In the second round, at a 1-year follow-up, 80 survivors (including some diagnosed more recently) responded to the same questionnaire. Over that time, quality of life had diminished further for 74% of respondents (mean score, 55 vs. 68; P less than .001).

Half of the patients reported more fatigue, 71% more nausea and vomiting, 59% more pain, and 66% more dyspnea than at baseline. The most bothersome symptoms cited in the follow-up survey included tingling of the hands and feet (32%), back pain (28%), bone aches and pain (26%), pain in the arms and shoulders (19%), and drowsiness (18%).

"Maximizing disease control while minimizing these symptoms with supportive care for the entire survivorship trajectory is, I think, one of the major challenges of multiple myeloma treatment," said Dr. Mols.

She recommended referral of survivors to specific cancer survivorship care programs for management of symptoms that extend beyond the active phase of their treatment.

Improvement – and Side Effects

Dr. William I. Bensinger, who was not affiliated with the study, said following the meeting that the results were "not surprising."

"We have made great strides in the management of multiple myeloma, and patients are clearly living longer. Some of these improved treatments, however, come with the risk of significant side effects," said Dr. Bensinger, professor of medicine at the University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

Dr. Bensinger called the results "a wake-up call to my fellow oncologists that we need to do a better job of proactively managing symptoms of treatment in order to improve our patients’ quality of life."

Ebb and Flow in QOL

Another multiple myeloma specialist, Dr. Jayesh Mehta, a professor of medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, said that quality of life may ebb and flow over the course of many years in survivors.

"What we see in a typical patient is somewhat impaired quality of life at baseline that may worsen or remain stable in the short term, but improves by a year after diagnosis, remains good for a few years – say, 3 to 5 – worsens somewhat when there is relapse due to disease and therapy, stabilizes as the disease responds, and then worsens again when the disease returns."

Funding for the study was provided by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Dutch Cancer Society, the Jonker-Driessen Foundation, ZonMW (the Netherlands organization for health research and development), and PHAROS (Population-Based Haematological Registry for Observational Studies).

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MIAMI – Patients who are diagnosed with multiple myeloma can expect to live longer than in the past, but their symptom burden remains considerable for at least 10 years after diagnosis, a prospective, population-based, Dutch study has concluded.

"The symptom burden is not only caused by the disease itself but also by the new aggressive treatments," said Floortje Mols, Ph.D., of Tilburg (the Netherlands) University at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Dr. Floortje Mols

Dr. Mols and her coauthors identified multiple myeloma patients in the Eindhoven (the Netherlands) Cancer Registry who had been diagnosed during 1999-2010 in that country. They surveyed the survivors twice – at baseline and a year later – along with an age- and sex-matched population-based cohort.

At baseline, 156 survivors reported significantly lower scores than did the control group on every subscale of the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire), a validated instrument that has been used in more than 3,000 published studies. No significant differences were seen in symptom and quality of life scores between short-term (defined as up to 5 years) and long-term (more than 5 years) survivors, she reported.

Physical functioning, fatigue, and dyspnea scores diverged from those in the controls most strikingly, but the difference was statistically significant for every subscale with P scores of less than 0.01 and beyond, said Dr. Mols, a medical psychologist at the university’s center of research on psychology in somatic diseases and the Comprehensive Cancer Centre South, Eindhoven.

In addition, multiple myeloma survivors reported a high rate of disease-specific symptoms, including tingling and numbness, pain, and drowsiness – even years beyond diagnosis. Peripheral neuropathy is a common side effect of therapy for multiple myeloma.

At baseline, 37% of short- and long-term survivors reported worrying about their health during the previous week, 34% reported worrying about their disease, and 21% reported worrying "very much or quite a bit" about dying.

In the second round, at a 1-year follow-up, 80 survivors (including some diagnosed more recently) responded to the same questionnaire. Over that time, quality of life had diminished further for 74% of respondents (mean score, 55 vs. 68; P less than .001).

Half of the patients reported more fatigue, 71% more nausea and vomiting, 59% more pain, and 66% more dyspnea than at baseline. The most bothersome symptoms cited in the follow-up survey included tingling of the hands and feet (32%), back pain (28%), bone aches and pain (26%), pain in the arms and shoulders (19%), and drowsiness (18%).

"Maximizing disease control while minimizing these symptoms with supportive care for the entire survivorship trajectory is, I think, one of the major challenges of multiple myeloma treatment," said Dr. Mols.

She recommended referral of survivors to specific cancer survivorship care programs for management of symptoms that extend beyond the active phase of their treatment.

Improvement – and Side Effects

Dr. William I. Bensinger, who was not affiliated with the study, said following the meeting that the results were "not surprising."

"We have made great strides in the management of multiple myeloma, and patients are clearly living longer. Some of these improved treatments, however, come with the risk of significant side effects," said Dr. Bensinger, professor of medicine at the University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

Dr. Bensinger called the results "a wake-up call to my fellow oncologists that we need to do a better job of proactively managing symptoms of treatment in order to improve our patients’ quality of life."

Ebb and Flow in QOL

Another multiple myeloma specialist, Dr. Jayesh Mehta, a professor of medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, said that quality of life may ebb and flow over the course of many years in survivors.

"What we see in a typical patient is somewhat impaired quality of life at baseline that may worsen or remain stable in the short term, but improves by a year after diagnosis, remains good for a few years – say, 3 to 5 – worsens somewhat when there is relapse due to disease and therapy, stabilizes as the disease responds, and then worsens again when the disease returns."

Funding for the study was provided by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Dutch Cancer Society, the Jonker-Driessen Foundation, ZonMW (the Netherlands organization for health research and development), and PHAROS (Population-Based Haematological Registry for Observational Studies).

MIAMI – Patients who are diagnosed with multiple myeloma can expect to live longer than in the past, but their symptom burden remains considerable for at least 10 years after diagnosis, a prospective, population-based, Dutch study has concluded.

"The symptom burden is not only caused by the disease itself but also by the new aggressive treatments," said Floortje Mols, Ph.D., of Tilburg (the Netherlands) University at the annual conference of the American Psychosocial Oncology Society.

Dr. Floortje Mols

Dr. Mols and her coauthors identified multiple myeloma patients in the Eindhoven (the Netherlands) Cancer Registry who had been diagnosed during 1999-2010 in that country. They surveyed the survivors twice – at baseline and a year later – along with an age- and sex-matched population-based cohort.

At baseline, 156 survivors reported significantly lower scores than did the control group on every subscale of the EORTC QLQ-C30 (European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire), a validated instrument that has been used in more than 3,000 published studies. No significant differences were seen in symptom and quality of life scores between short-term (defined as up to 5 years) and long-term (more than 5 years) survivors, she reported.

Physical functioning, fatigue, and dyspnea scores diverged from those in the controls most strikingly, but the difference was statistically significant for every subscale with P scores of less than 0.01 and beyond, said Dr. Mols, a medical psychologist at the university’s center of research on psychology in somatic diseases and the Comprehensive Cancer Centre South, Eindhoven.

In addition, multiple myeloma survivors reported a high rate of disease-specific symptoms, including tingling and numbness, pain, and drowsiness – even years beyond diagnosis. Peripheral neuropathy is a common side effect of therapy for multiple myeloma.

At baseline, 37% of short- and long-term survivors reported worrying about their health during the previous week, 34% reported worrying about their disease, and 21% reported worrying "very much or quite a bit" about dying.

In the second round, at a 1-year follow-up, 80 survivors (including some diagnosed more recently) responded to the same questionnaire. Over that time, quality of life had diminished further for 74% of respondents (mean score, 55 vs. 68; P less than .001).

Half of the patients reported more fatigue, 71% more nausea and vomiting, 59% more pain, and 66% more dyspnea than at baseline. The most bothersome symptoms cited in the follow-up survey included tingling of the hands and feet (32%), back pain (28%), bone aches and pain (26%), pain in the arms and shoulders (19%), and drowsiness (18%).

"Maximizing disease control while minimizing these symptoms with supportive care for the entire survivorship trajectory is, I think, one of the major challenges of multiple myeloma treatment," said Dr. Mols.

She recommended referral of survivors to specific cancer survivorship care programs for management of symptoms that extend beyond the active phase of their treatment.

Improvement – and Side Effects

Dr. William I. Bensinger, who was not affiliated with the study, said following the meeting that the results were "not surprising."

"We have made great strides in the management of multiple myeloma, and patients are clearly living longer. Some of these improved treatments, however, come with the risk of significant side effects," said Dr. Bensinger, professor of medicine at the University of Washington and Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle.

Dr. Bensinger called the results "a wake-up call to my fellow oncologists that we need to do a better job of proactively managing symptoms of treatment in order to improve our patients’ quality of life."

Ebb and Flow in QOL

Another multiple myeloma specialist, Dr. Jayesh Mehta, a professor of medicine at Northwestern University in Chicago, said that quality of life may ebb and flow over the course of many years in survivors.

"What we see in a typical patient is somewhat impaired quality of life at baseline that may worsen or remain stable in the short term, but improves by a year after diagnosis, remains good for a few years – say, 3 to 5 – worsens somewhat when there is relapse due to disease and therapy, stabilizes as the disease responds, and then worsens again when the disease returns."

Funding for the study was provided by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Dutch Cancer Society, the Jonker-Driessen Foundation, ZonMW (the Netherlands organization for health research and development), and PHAROS (Population-Based Haematological Registry for Observational Studies).

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multiple myeloma, live longer, symptom burden, new aggressive treatments, Floortje Mols, Ph.D., the American Psychosocial Oncology Society, Eindhoven (the Netherlands) Cancer Registry, EORTC QLQ-C30, European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire, quality of life, tingling and numbness, pain, and drowsiness, Peripheral neuropathy,
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FROM THE ANNUAL CONFERENCE OF THE AMERICAN PSYCHOSOCIAL ONCOLOGY SOCIETY

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Inside the Article

Vitals

Major Finding: In 1 year, quality of life diminished for 74% of respondents (mean score, 55 vs. 68; P less than .001).

Data Source: The data were self-reported on the EORTC QLQ-C30 questionnaire by multiple myeloma survivors in the Eindhoven (the Netherlands) Cancer Registry.

Disclosures: Funding for the study was provided by the Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research, the Dutch Cancer Society, the Jonker-Driessen Foundation, ZonMW (the Netherlands organization for health research and development), and the PHAROS (Population-Based Haematological Registry for Observational Studies).