| Literature DB >> 22311584 |
K M Landsbergen1, J B Prins, H G Brunner, P van Duijvendijk, F M Nagengast, J H van Krieken, M Ligtenberg, N Hoogerbrugge.
Abstract
According to the Dutch Guideline on Hereditary Colorectal Cancer published in 2008, patients with recently diagnosed colorectal cancer (CRC) should undergo microsatellite instability (MSI) testing by a pathologist immediately after tumour resection if they are younger than 50 years, or if a second CRC has been diagnosed before the age of 70 years, owing to the high risk of Lynch syndrome (MIPA). The aim of the present MIPAPS study was to investigate general distress and cancer-specific distress following MSI testing. From March 2007 to September 2009, 400 patients who had been tested for MSI after newly diagnosed CRC were recruited from 30 Dutch hospitals. Levels of general distress (SCL-90) and cancer-specific distress (IES) were assessed immediately after MSI result disclosure (T1) and 6 months later (T2). Response rates were 23/77 (30%) in the MSI-positive patients and 58/323 (18%) in the MSI-negative patients. Levels of general distress and cancer-specific distress were moderate. In the MSI-positive group, 27% of the patients had high general distress at T1 versus 18% at T2 (p = 0.5), whereas in the MSI-negative group, these percentage were 14 and 18% (p = 0.6), respectively. At T1 and T2, cancer-specific distress rates in the MSI-positive group and MSI-negative group were 39 versus 27% (p = 0.3) and 38 versus 36% (p = 1.0), respectively. High levels of general distress were correlated with female gender, low social support and high perceived cancer risk. Moderate levels of distress were observed after MSI testing, similar to those found in other patients diagnosed with CRC. Immediately after result disclosure, high cancer-specific distress was observed in 40% of the MSI-positive patients.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2012 PMID: 22311584 PMCID: PMC3365237 DOI: 10.1007/s10689-012-9510-1
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fam Cancer ISSN: 1389-9600 Impact factor: 2.375
Baseline characteristics of the patients
| MSI-positive groupa | MSI-negative group | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| n = 23 | n = 58 |
| |
|
| |||
| Age at cancer diagnosis | 48 ± 10 | 48 ± 12 | nsb |
| Male | 12 (52%) | 29 (50%) | nsc |
| Married or cohabiting | 23 (100%) | 50 (86%) | nsc |
| Having children | 21 (91%) | 49 (89%) | nsc |
| Educational level > high school | 14 (61%) | 30 (52%) | nsc |
| Religious | 17 (74%) | 34 (59%) | nsc |
| CRC diagnosed below 50 year | 15 (65%) | 38 (66%) | nsc |
| Second CRC diagnosed below 70 year | 7 (32%) | 20 (35%) | nsc |
|
| |||
| Right sided tumour location | 11 (50%) | 15 (26%) | 0.06c# |
| TNM stage I or II | 16 (73%) | 26 (45%) | 0.04c* |
| Adjuvant therapy | 12 (55%) | 40 (78%) | 0.04c* |
aMSI-positive means that the MSI-test in the tumor is positive and is performed at the initiative of a pathologist, either because the CRC was diagnosed below 50 years or because it was the second CRC below 70 years
bIndependent samples T test
cPearson chi-square test
# p < 0.1; * p < 0.05; ns not statistically significant
Psychosocial outcomes of MSI-positive (n = 22*) and MSI-negative (n = 51*) patients and their partners (n = 13 and n = 37 respectively), immediately after MSI-test disclosure (T1) and 6 months later (T2)
| MSI-positive patientsa | MSI-negative patients | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| T1 | T2 | Δ | T1 | T2 | Δ | |
| CRC patients | ||||||
| Psychological distressb | 137 ± 45 | 127 ± 51 | −10 ± 27 | 129 ± 37 | 133 ± 43 | 4 ± 24 |
| Cancer specific distressc | 22 ± 22 | 18 ± 17 | −4 ± 14 | 21 ± 15 | 22 ± 17 | 1 ± 13 |
| Depressiond | 4 ± 6 | 3 ± 5 | −1 ± 4 | 3 ± 4 | 5 ± 6 | 2 ± 5 |
| Angerd | 5 ± 6 | 5 ± 6 | 0 ± 4 | 3 ± 4 | 5 ± 6 | 1 ± 4 |
| Fatigued | 8 ± 6 | 5 ± 6 | −3 ± 5 | 6 ± 6 | 6 ± 6 | 0 ± 4 |
| Tensiond | 5 ± 5 | 4 ± 5 | −1 ± 3 | 3 ± 4 | 5 ± 5 | 1 ± 4 |
| Vigord | 9 ± 4 | 11 ± 5 | 2 ± 5 | 9 ± 5 | 10 ± 5 | 1 ± 5 |
| Cancer risk perceptione | 44 ± 23 | 53 ± 23 | 10 ± 23 | 43 ± 21 | 48 ± 22 | 5 ± 24 |
| Social supportf | ||||||
| Potential emotional trust | 16 ± 4 | 16 ± 4 | 0 ± 4 | 17 ± 4 | 16 ± 4 | 0 ± 3 |
| Actual emotional trust | 7 ± 2 | 7 ± 2 | 0 ± 2 | 7 ± 2 | 6 ± 2 | 0 ± 2 |
| Visits | 6 ± 1 | 6 ± 2 | 0 ± 1 | 6 ± 1 | 6 ± 1 | 0 ± 1 |
| Partners of CRC patients | ||||||
| Caregiver’s esteemg | 29 ± 4 | 27 ± 5 | −3 ± 5 | 29 ± 3 | 28 ± 4 | 0 ± 4 |
| Perceived stress by careh | 21 ± 4 | 18 ± 5 | −2 ± 5 | 23 ± 6 | 21 ± 5 | −1 ± 6 |
aMSI-positive means that the MSI-test in the tumor is positive and is performed at the initiative of a pathologist, either because the CRC was diagnosed below 50 years of because it was the second CRC below 70 years. Δ, difference scores (T2-T1), based on the original scores before rounding
bSCL-90
cIES-CRC
dPOMS
eLife time risk to get CRC again
fISB
gCRAD
hEDIZ
* Patients who filled in both questionnaires (T1 and T2)
Fig. 1a Course of mean levels of psychological distress in 22 MSI-positive^ and 51 MSI-negative patients with CRC. b Course of mean levels of caregiver experiences in 13 partners of MSI-positive^ patients and 37 partners of MSI-negative patients with CRC, a lower CRA-D score indicates higher caregiver’s esteem, a higher EDIZ score indicates higher perceived distress by informal care. a SCL-90: p < 0.03 (interaction-effect); b CRAD: p = 0.01 (time-effect), EDIZ: p = 0.04 (time-effect). ^ MSI-positive means that the MSI-test in the tumour is positive and is performed at the initiative of a pathologist, either because the CRC was diagnosed below 50 years or because it was the second CRC below 70 years
Fig. 2Psychological distress per MIPAPS patient at T1 and T2. A score above the cut off of 160 (dotted line) indicates high psychological distress