| Literature DB >> 34018030 |
Fiona Menger1, Nurul Asyiqin Mohammed Halim2, Ben Rimmer3, Linda Sharp3.
Abstract
PURPOSE: Interest is growing in post-traumatic growth (PTG) after cancer prompted, in part, by observations of positive associations with health-related quality of life. Qualitative research provides valuable insight into survivors' experiences. We conducted a scoping review of qualitative evidence on PTG in cancer, determining the number, nature, range and scope of studies, and gaps in the literature.Entities:
Keywords: Cancer; Coping; Post-traumatic growth; Survivorship
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34018030 PMCID: PMC8464569 DOI: 10.1007/s00520-021-06253-2
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Support Care Cancer ISSN: 0941-4355 Impact factor: 3.603
Fig. 1PRISMA flow diagram of eligible studies
Summary of included study characteristics (n = 28)
| Study characteristics | Study characteristics | ||
|---|---|---|---|
| Country | Sample size | ||
| USA | 12 (42.9) | ≤ 15 | 11 (39.2) |
| Australia | 3 (10.7) | 16–50 | 9 (32.2) |
| Iran | 2 (7.1) | > 51 | 8 (28.6) |
| UK | 2 (7.1) | Study design | |
| Other1 (1 paper each) | 9 (32.2) | Qualitative | 16 (57.1) |
| Cancer site | Mixed methods | 12 (42.9) | |
| Breast | 14 (50) | Orientation (methodological or philosophical position) | |
| Mixed | 6 (21.4) | Generic qualitative | 13 (46.4) |
| Haematological | 4 (14.3) | Phenomenology | 9 (32.2) |
| Head and neck | 2 (7.1) | Grounded theory | 3 (10.7) |
| Bone | 1 (3.6) | Narrative | 2 (7.1) |
| Testicular | 1 (3.6) | Case study | 1 (3.6) |
| Findings in relation to PTG outcomesa | Data generation techniqueb,c | ||
| Relating to others | 26 (92.9) | Individual interviews | 21 (72.4) |
| New opportunities | 23 (82.1) | Other techniques | 5 (17.2) |
| Personal strength | 27 (96.4) | Focus groups | 2 (6.9) |
| Spiritual change | 19 (67.9) | Narrative interview | 1 (3.5) |
| Appreciation of life | 25 (89.3) | Data analysis techniquec | |
| Number of PTG outcomes reported | Thematic analysis | 9 (32.2) | |
| Five | 16 (57.1) | Content analysis | 5 (17.9) |
| Four | 6 (21.4) | Phenomenological analysis | 4 (14.3) |
| Three | 4 (14.3) | Constant comparison | 4 (14.3) |
| Two | 2 (7.1) | Other | 6 (21.3) |
aOther countries: China, France, India, Italy, Japan, North America, Norway, Switzerland, and Turkey
bOne study conducted both interviews and focus groups [46] and has been counted twice
cData generation and analysis techniques were mapped to the QR_LAW[25]
Characteristics of study participants
| Source (country) | Sample size | Cancer site | Agea | Sex | Time since diagnosisb | Time since treatmentb |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fromm et al. [ | 90 | Haematological | 38.8 | M (58%), F (42%) | 28.9 months | 49.5 months |
| Carpenter et al. [ | 60 | Breast | 53.7 | F (100%) | 30.8 months | 27.1 months |
| McGrath [ | 12 | Haematological | 25–60 | M (66.7%), F (33.3%) | 3–15 years | 1–10 years |
| Dahan et al. [ | 6 | Haematological | 50–66 | M (50%), F (50%) | NR | > 3 months |
| Ruf et al. [ | 31 | Head and neck | 58.2 | M (100%) | 3.7 years | > 6 months |
| Hegelson [ | 180 | Breast | 59.43 | F (100%) | 10.58 years | NR |
| Sadler-Gerhardt et al. [ | 8 | Breast | 30–80 | F (100%) | NR | 10 months–5 years |
| Thambyrajah et al. [ | 20 | Head and neck | 67 | M (50%), F (50%) | NR | 6–14 months |
| Bishop et al. [ | 30 | Haematological | 51.3 | M (46.7%), F (53.3%) | NR | 12.9 years |
| Morris et al. [ | 209 | Mixed | 62.99 | NR | 2.9 years | NR |
| Hoggan [ | 18 | Breast | 37–65 | F (100%) | NR | 3–7 years |
| Lelorain et al. [ | 28 | Breast | NR | F (100%) | 5–15 years | NR |
| Tsuchiya et al. [ | 10 | Breast | 53.3 | F (100%) | NR | 5.2 years |
| Documet et al. [ | 112 | Breast | 34–81 | F (100%) | 1.53–29.36 years | NR |
| Frye [ | 6 | Mixed | 60–86 | M (16.7%), F (83.3%) | 14–32 years | NR |
| Triplett [ | 87 | Breast | 18–45 | F (100%) | 12 months | NR |
| Connerty et al. [ | 15 | Mixed | 36–85 | M (53.3%), F (46.7%) | 15 years | NR |
| Fauske et al. [ | 8 | Bone | 18–50 | M (50%), F (50%) | 3–10 years | NR |
| Mehrabi et al. [ | 18 | Breast | 31–65 | F (100%) | NR | 3–6 months |
| Cheng et al. [ | 29c | Breast | 53.9 | F (100%) | 6–180 months | NR |
| Martino et al. [ | 12 | Mixed | 25–70 | M (25%), F (75%) | NR | 3 years |
| Matheson et al. [ | 18 | Testicular | 34 | M (100%) | NR | 6 months |
| Hoogland [ | 56 | Mixed | 72.45 | M (39.3%), F (60.7%) | 36.71 months | NR |
| Barthakur et al. [ | 15 | Breast | 57 | F (100%) | 9.3 years | > 6 months |
| Raque-Bogdan et al. [ | 13 | Breast | 34 | F (100%) | 3.5 years | NR |
| Adorno et al. [ | 5149 | Mixed | NR | M (36%), F (64%) | 2–10 years | NR |
| Inan et al. [ | 13 | Breast | 48.7 | F (100%) | NR | 7–22 months |
| Fallah et al. [ | 23 | Breast | 46.22 | F (100%) | 26.96 months | NR |
aAge is reported as the mean. Where the mean is not available, the range is given
bTime since diagnosis and treatment is reported as the mean. Where the mean is not available, the range is given, or time is denoted from the inclusion criteria
cA sub-sample of 29 participants were involved in the qualitative stage (full sample n = 100)
dNR, not reported
Study aims, orientations, and techniques
| Source (country) | Study aim | Study design | Orientation | Data collection method (Qual) | Example question framing | Data analysis method |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Fromm et al. [ | To explore the types of positive and negative consequences experienced following bone marrow transplantation | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | Have you noticed any changes in your relationships with other people since your transplant? | Thematic analysis |
| Carpenter et al. [ | To examine differences in self-transformation and factors associated with self-transformation in breast cancer survivors | Mixed methods | Narrative | Semi-structured interview | How have you or your feelings about yourself changed since your breast cancer diagnosis? | Narrative analysis |
| McGrath [ | To explore positive outcomes within the notion of spirituality in survivors of haematological malignancies | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Open-ended interview | Could you tell me of your experience, in your own words and in your own way, from the time you became aware that you were ill? In particular, I am interested to hear about how that has changed how you see the world and what you believe is important? | Thematic analysis |
| Dahan et al. [ | To understand the emotional impact of multiple myeloma, as well as the impact of its principle treatment, peripheral blood stem cell transplant (PBSCT) | Qualitative | Grounded theory | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Constant comparison |
| Ruf et al. [ | To explore whether the frequency of positive changes and the areas in which positive changes are found differ between patients and their women partners | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Structured psychiatric interview | Did you experience positive changes in your life since your cancer diagnosis? | Content analysis |
| Hegelson [ | To learn how women viewed the experience 10 years later in terms of both benefits and costs following breast cancer | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Open-ended interview | Now that it is more than 10 years later, do you see that breast cancer has had any lasting effects on your life? | Coding framework |
| Sadler-Gerhardt et al. [ | To investigate the lived experience of women surviving breast cancer by inviting them to tell about if and how they had changed and what meaning they were making of the process | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Thematic analysis |
| Thambyrajah et al. [ | To explore whether patients with head and neck cancer experience positive consequences posttreatment and to investigate the nature of any benefit finding | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | What good things, if any, do you think have come out of your illness? | Framework analysis |
| Bishop et al. [ | To gain a deeper understanding of lasting life changes experienced by cancer survivors following blood and marrow transplantation | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | What would you describe as the most significant long-lasting positive change in your life since your cancer experience? | Content analysis |
| Morris et al. [ | To ascertain the salience and prevalence of different PTG domains with cancer survivors | Mixed methods | Phenomenology | Open-ended survey question | Please feel free to add any comments that relate to the way in which you are dealing with (or have dealt with) being diagnosed with cancer or to the changes in your life that may have happened since your diagnosis | Thematic analysis |
| Hoggan [ | Based on the assumption that challenging life events hold the potential for personal growth, this sought to better understand this process of growth as a learning experience | Mixed methods | Case study | Semi-structured interview, focus group | In what ways did you change because of your breast cancer experience? | Constant comparison |
| Lelorain et al. [ | To explore the emergence of PTG in breast cancer survivor narratives concerning the changes caused by the cancer in their lives | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Open-ended interview | Do you have the feeling that this cancer has changed something in your life or in yourself or, on the contrary, do you have the feeling that in the end nothing has really changed in your life or in yourself because of cancer? | Discourse/text analysis |
| Tsuchiya et al. [ | To describe positive changes following breast cancer diagnosis, together with factors affecting the changes, among Japanese breast cancer survivors | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Thematic analysis |
| Documet et al. [ | To explore (a) how women who were diagnosed with breast cancer (BC) defined themselves as survivors and when this occurred and (b) the types of benefits they derived from their experiences | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Instrument with open- and closed-ended questions | Has anything positive come from you having had breast cancer? | Thematic analysis |
| Frye [ | To learn how very long-term survivors identify in relation to cancer, how they have changed, both positively and negatively, and how they make meaning of their cancer experience | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | How have you changed as a result of your cancer experience? Please tell me in what ways you believe you are now different compared to how you were before you were diagnosed with cancer | Phenomenological analysis |
| Triplett [ | To examine PTG and coping, QoL, depression, and social support in a sample of young breast cancer survivors | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Open-ended questionnaire | What positive experiences have you had? | Constant comparison |
| Connerty et al. [ | To explore people’s experiences of cancer to assess the relevance of the PTG construct and to identify potentially modifiable factors that may promote PTG | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured group interviews | Not reported | Thematic analysis |
| Fauske et al. [ | To explore how survivors of osteosarcoma of the lower extremity experience physical and psychosocial late effects several years after undergoing arduous treatment | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Thematic analysis |
| Mehrabi et al. [ | To investigate experiences relating to PTG of Iranian women with breast cancer | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Thematic analysis |
| Cheng et al. [ | To explore the perceptions of negative and positive life changes following treatment completion among breast cancer survivors | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | To what extent do you feel that your life has changed as a result of breast cancer and its treatment? | Content analysis |
| Martino et al. [ | To highlight the narrative markers and their transformative functions, underlying the PTG within cancer survivors’ narratives | Mixed methods | Narrative | Life story interview | Not reported | Other technique |
| Matheson et al. [ | To examine younger testicular cancer survivors adjustment to survivorship | Qualitative | Grounded theory | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Constant comparison |
| Hoogland [ | To evaluate posttraumatic change in older adults with cancer by examining PTG and distress | Mixed methods | Generic qualitative | Open-ended questionnaire item | Not reported | Content analysis |
| Barthakur et al. [ | To understand the phenomenon of PTG in women survivors of breast cancer from an Indian perspective | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Phenomenological analysis |
| Raque-Bogdan et al. [ | To examine how women diagnosed with breast cancer before the age of 40 made meaning of the impact of their cancer experience | Qualitative | Generic qualitative | Semi-structured interview | Not reported | Other technique |
| Adorno et al. [ | To gain perspective on the scope of positive aspects perceived by a range of cancer survivors | Mixed methods | Grounded theory | Open-ended questionnaire item | Please tell us about any positive aspects of having cancer | Content analysis |
| Inan et al. [ | To explore the nature of PTG in Turkish breast cancer survivors in the post-treatment first 2 years | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Semi-structured interview | Could you please tell me what positive life changes associated with breast cancer you have had? | Phenomenological analysis |
| Fallah et al. [ | To understand the dimensions of Iranian women’s perception of PTG among breast cancer patients | Qualitative | Phenomenology | Open-ended questionnaire | Not reported | Phenomenological analysis |