| Literature DB >> 32424569 |
Karin Biering1, Morten Frydenberg2, Helle Pappot3, Niels Henrik Hjollund4,5.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Fatigue following breast cancer is a well-known problem, with both high and persistent prevalence. Previous studies suffer from lack of repeated measurements, late recruitment and short periods of follow-up. The course of fatigue from diagnosis and treatment to the long-time outcome status is unknown as well as differences in the level of fatigue between treatment regimens. The purpose of this study was to describe the long-time course of fatigue from the time of clinical suspicion of breast cancer, its dependence of patient characteristics and treatment regimens and the comparison with the course of fatigue among women with the same suspicion, but not diagnosed with breast cancer.Entities:
Keywords: Breast Cancer; Fatigue; Long-term; Longitudinal; Mammography; Rehabilitation
Year: 2020 PMID: 32424569 PMCID: PMC7235149 DOI: 10.1186/s41687-020-00187-9
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Patient Rep Outcomes ISSN: 2509-8020
Fig. 1Flowchart of inclusion of participants and questionnaires in a study of long-term fatigue after breast cancer
Characteristics of women at the time of mammography categorized by cancer diagnosis
| All Count (%) | MFI fatigue score at baseline Mean (SD) | Not cancer Count (%) | Cancer Count (%) | Non-responders Count (%) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 323 (100) | 28.8 (21.2) | 204 (63) | 119 (37) | 2380 (100) | |
| 2639 (100) | 1425 (54) | 1214 (46) | n/a | ||
| 2 | 25 (8) | 33.5 (23.1) | 19 (9) | 6 (5) | n/a |
| 3 | 20 (6) | 35.3 (22.0) | 17 (8) | 3 (3) | n/a |
| 4 | 78 (24) | 28.2 (20.4) | 72 (35) | 6 (5) | n/a |
| 5 to 14 | 168 (52) | 28.5 (22.0) | 68 (33) | 100 (84) | n/a |
| 15 to 17 | 32 (10) | 24.2 (15.8) | 28 (14) | 4 (3) | n/a |
| N | 123 (38) | 4 (2) | 119 (100) | 142 (6) | |
| Min | 0 | 113 | 0 | n/a | |
| Max | 1504 | 1504 | 40 | n/a | |
| Median | 16 | 460 | 16 | n/a | |
| None | 289 (89) | 27.3 (20.3) | 189 (93) | 100 (84) | 2075 (87.2) |
| 1 | 23 (7) | 38.0 (24.9) | 10 (5) | 13 (11) | 175 (7.4) |
| 2 or more | 11 (3) | 49.9 (21.2) | 5 (2) | 6 (5) | 130 (5.5) |
| Working | 205 (63) | 24.9 (18.3) | 156 (76) | 49 (41) | 1568 (65.9) |
| Health benefit - temporarily | 32 (10) | 35.6 (24.2) | 15 (7) | 17 (14) | 259 (10.9) |
| Health benefit -permanently | 65 (20) | 35.6 (23.4) | 32 (16) | 33 (28) | 411 (17.3) |
| Retirement pension | 21 (7) | 35.2 (26.5) | 1 (0) | 20 (17) | 83 (3.5) |
| Missing | 59 (2.6) | ||||
| No protocol assigned | 16 (5) | 41.5 (25.7) | 0 (0) | 16 (13) | 32 (1.3) |
| A | 5 (2) | 15.8 (18.7) | 0 (0) | 5 (4) | 22 (0.9) |
| B | 32 (10) | 24.3 (22.4) | 0 (0) | 32 (27) | 71 (3.0) |
| C | 38 (12) | 33.3 (24.2) | 0 (0) | 38 (32) | 55 (2.3) |
| D | 28 (9) | 25.2 (19.1) | 0 (0) | 28 (24) | 31 (1.3) |
| Irrelevant/missing | 204 (63) | 28.5 (20.0) | 204 (100) | 0 (0) | 2239 (94.1) |
| Younger than 30 | 17 (5) | 21.3 (13.9) | 16 (8) | 1 (1) | 99 (4.2) |
| 30–39 | 49 (15) | 29.5 (22.5) | 41 (20) | 8 (7) | 566 (23.8) |
| 40–49 | 90 (28) | 28.0 (21.3) | 74 (36) | 16 (13) | 784 (32.9) |
| 50–59 | 95 (29) | 31.0 (20.3) | 49 (24) | 46 (39) | 543 (22.8) |
| Older than 60 | 72 (22) | 28.1 (22.7) | 24 (12) | 48 (40) | 324 (13.6) |
| Missing | 64 (2.7) | ||||
| N | 320 (99) | 201 (99) | 119 (100) | n/a | |
| Mean | 11.16 | 10.88 | 11.62 | n/a | |
| SD | 7.48 | 7.24 | 7.86 | n/a | |
| N | 318 (98) | 201 (99) | 117 (98) | n/a | |
| Mean | 75.04 | 76.03 | 73.35 | n/a | |
| SD | 20.78 | 18.99 | 23.53 | n/a | |
| N | 323 (100) | 204 (100) | 119 (100) | n/a | |
| Mean | 28.79 | 28.48 | 29.33 | n/a | |
| SD | 21.18 | 19.96 | 23.21 | n/a | |
Fig. 2Mean fatigue in women with and without breast cancer
Fig. 3Mean change in fatigue from before mammography among women with and without breast cancer
Fig. 4Change in fatigue comparing women with breast cancer to women without breast cancer
Fig. 5Mean fatigue among women with breast cancer divided according to treatment regimes
Fig. 6Course of fatigue related to fatigue level before mammography for women with breast cancer