| Literature DB >> 33192403 |
Fabiola Silvaggi1, Matilde Leonardi1, Alberto Raggi1, Michela Eigenmann1, Arianna Mariniello1, Antonio Silvani2, Elena Lamperti2, Silvia Schiavolin1.
Abstract
Brain tumors (BT) are between the eight most common cancers among persons aged 40 years, with an average survival time of 10 years for patients affected by non-malignant brain tumor. Some patients continue to work, reporting difficulties in work-related activities, or even job loss. The purpose of the present study was to review the existing information about the ability people with BT to return to work and to identify factors associated with job loss. We performed a systematic review on SCOPUS and EMBASE for peer-reviewed papers that reported studies assessing work ability in patients with BT that were published in the period from January 2010 to January 2020. Out of 800 identified records, 7 articles were selected for analysis, in which 1,507 participants with BT were enrolled overall. Three main themes emerged: the impact of neuropsychological functioning on work productivity, the change of employment status for long-term survivors and issues related to return to work processes. Based on the results of selected studies, it can be concluded that the impact of BT on workforce participation is determined by depressive symptoms and cognitive deficits, as well as by high short-term mortality but also on environmental barriers. Vocational Rehabilitation programs should be implemented to help patients wishing to return to or maintain their current work, as much as possible.Entities:
Keywords: RTW; brain tumors; employment; public health; work ability
Year: 2020 PMID: 33192403 PMCID: PMC7658191 DOI: 10.3389/fnhum.2020.571191
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Hum Neurosci ISSN: 1662-5161 Impact factor: 3.169
Figure 1Flowchart of papers' selection.
Main characteristics and main outcomes of the included studies.
| Nugent et al. ( | Brain tumor | 45 | 43,4 | 17 | 43 | Higher levels of depressive symptoms are associated to a decline in the work ability |
| Collins et al. ( | Brain tumor | 233 | 40,9 | 79 | 209 | Work tasks that involved working memory are more likely to be reported as problematic |
| Pentsova et al. ( | Anaplastic oligoastrocytoma | 195 | 39 | 111 | 53 | The functional assessment of patient carried out after surgery impact on change in employment status in future years |
| Rusbridge et al. ( | Brain tumor | 34 | 46 | 6.66 | VR service improve significantly the work status of brain tumor survivors | |
| Starnoni et al. ( | Glioblastoma | 125 | 48,2 | 77 | 112 | Diagnosis and treatment-related symptoms represented the main factors that prevented the resumption of work |
| Tibæk et al. ( | Brain tumor | 480 | 24,4 | High mortality and higher levels of impairments reduce the likely of RTW | ||
| Al-Shudifat et al. ( | Vestibular Schwannomas | 395 | 59,2 | 188 | 207 | Women and patients above 50 years with dimension cancer >25 mm have a high likely to reduce Work Capacity after surgical treatment and to have major difficulty to return to work |
VR, Vocational Rehabilitation; RTW, Return to work.