Symptom burden among older breast cancer survivors: The Thinking and Living With Cancer (TLC) study

Abstract

Background:

Little is known about longitudinal symptom burden and its consequences for well-being, and if lifestyle moderates burden in older survivors. Methods:

We report on 36-month data from survivors 60+ with newly diagnosed non-metastatic breast cancer and non-cancer controls recruited August 2010-June 2016. Symptom burden was a sum of self-reported symptoms/diseases: pain (yes/no), fatigue (FACT-fatigue), cognitive (FACT-cog), sleep problems (yes/no), depression (CES-D), anxiety (STAI), and cardiac problems and neuropathy (yes/no). Well-being was measured using the FACT-G, scaled from 0–100. Lifestyle included smoking, alcohol use, BMI, physical activity, and leisure activities. Mixed models assessed relationships between treatment group (chemotherapy +/− hormonal, hormonal only, control) and symptom burden, lifestyle, and covariates. Separate models tested the effects of fluctuations in symptom burden and lifestyle on function. Results:

All groups reported high baseline symptoms, and levels remained high over time; survivor-control differences were most notable for cognitive and sleep problems, anxiety, and neuropathy. The adjusted burden score was highest among chemotherapy-exposed survivors, followed by hormonal therapy vs. controls (p<.001). Burden score was related to physical, emotional, and functional well-being (e.g., survivors with lower vs. higher burden scores had 12.4-point higher physical well-being score). The composite lifestyle score was not related to symptom burden or well-being, but physical activity was significantly associated with each outcome (<.005). Conclusions:

Cancer and its treatments are associated with a higher level of actionable symptoms and greater loss of well-being over time in older breast cancer survivors than comparable non-cancer populations, suggesting the need for surveillance and opportunities for intervention.

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Mandelblatt, J. S., Zhai, W., Ahn, J., Small, B. J., Ahles, T. A., Carroll, J. E., Denduluri, N., Dilawari, A., Extermann, M., Graham, D., Hurria, A., Isaacs, C., Jacobsen, P. B., Jim, H., Luta, G., McDonald, B. C., Patel, S. K., Root, J. C., Saykin, A. J., Tometich, D. B., … Cohen, H. J. (2020). Symptom burden among older breast cancer survivors: The Thinking and Living With Cancer (TLC) study. Cancer, 126(6), 1183–1192. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.32663
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