| Literature DB >> 34617134 |
Alexandra-Cristina Paunescu1, Christiane Bergman Copie2, Sandra Malak3, Steven Le Gouill4, Vincent Ribrag5, Krimo Bouabdallah6,7, David Sibon8, Gerhard Rumpold9, Marie Preau10, Nicolas Mounier11, Corinne Haioun12, Fabrice Jardin13, Caroline Besson14,15.
Abstract
Health-related quality of life (HRQoL) is a multidimensional concept including physical, emotional, social, and cognitive functions, disease symptoms, and side effects of treatment. Differences in HRQoL due to gender, existence of comorbidities, and number of chemotherapy cycles are little explored in diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL) survivors. Our objective was to investigate whether differences in HRQoL in function of these factors exist 1 year after the diagnosis of DLBCL. One hundred and one patients, enrolled in the RT3 (Real-Time Tailored Therapy) Study, answered self-administrated European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire Core 30 (EORTC QLQ-C30), EORTC High-Grade Non-Hodgkin Lymphoma (NHL-HG29), Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), Post Traumatic Growth Inventory (PTGI), and Multidimensional Fatigue Inventory (MFI) questionnaires. Adjusted means of scores were calculated in multivariate linear regression models. Fifty-seven survivors (mean age of 58.5 years) answered all questionnaires. Women have significantly higher scores of posttraumatic growth and lower physical functioning than men (P < 0.04). Survivors with comorbidities have increased physical fatigue and symptom burden, increased emotional impact, mental fatigue and depression, and reduced physical functioning and global health status (all P < 0.05). A greater number of cycles of chemotherapy increase the level of symptoms (pain, neuropathy, and dyspnoea; P < 0.05). The various aspects related to HRQoL should be discussed with DLBCL patients and investigated, with the aim of developing strategies to ensure appropriate psychosocial and supportive care and to improve the HRQoL in these patients.Entities:
Keywords: Chemotherapy; Comorbidities; Lymphoma; Quality of life; Survivors
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34617134 PMCID: PMC8494456 DOI: 10.1007/s00277-021-04689-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ann Hematol ISSN: 0939-5555 Impact factor: 3.673
Fig. 1.Study diagram
Comparison of characteristics between participants (N = 69) and nonparticipants (N = 32) in the Lymphoma Quality of Life Study
| Characteristics | Participants | Nonparticipants | Comparison | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mean (SD) | Mean (SD) | |||
| Range | Range | |||
| Age at inclusion in the ‘RT3’ study (years) | 60.3 (14.8) | 64.3 (14.9) | 0.211a | |
| 20–84 | 29–92 | |||
| Sex | Male | 38 (55.07) | 21 (65.63) | 0.317b |
| Female | 31 (44.93) | 11 (34.38) | ||
| Health-related characteristics | ||||
| Ann Arbor Stage | I–II | 26 (37.68) | 9 (28.12) | 0.348b |
| III–IV | 43 (62.32) | 23 (71.88) | ||
| ( | ( | |||
| HANS results | Germinal centre B-cell–like (GCB) | 33 (53.23) | 17 (54.84) | 0.883b |
| Non-GCB | 29 (46.77) | 14 (45.16) | ||
| ICD-Oc | ( | ( | ||
| DLBCL | 51 (80.95) | 24 (80.00) | 0.841d | |
| Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) | 6 (9.52) | 2 (6.67) | ||
| High grade B-cell lymphoma with double/triple-hit or NOS (HGBL)/DLBCL not otherwise specified (DLBCL-NOS) | 6 (9.52) | 4 (13.33) | ||
| Comorbidities | ||||
| Type 2 diabetes | Yes | 6 (8.70) | 7 (21.88) | 0.107d |
| No | 63 (91.30) | 25 (78.13) | ||
| Arterial hypertension | Yes | 21 (30.43) | 10 (31.25) | 0.934b |
| No | 48 (69.57) | 22 (68.75) | ||
| Cardiovascular illnesses | Yes | 12 (17.39) | 4 (12.50) | 0.770d |
| No | 57 (82.61) | 28 (87.50) | ||
| Cancer (other) | Yes | 4 (5.80) | 5 (15.73) | 0.137d |
| No | 65 (94.20) | 27 (84.38) | ||
| Comorbidities (at least one) | Yes | 31 (44.93) | 16 (50.00) | 0.673d |
| No | 38 (55.07) | 16 (50.00) | ||
| Treatments | ||||
| Chemotherapy | Moderate (conventional) e | 43 (62.32) | 18 (58.06) | 0.687b |
| Intensivef | 26 (37.68) | 13 (41.94) | ||
| Number of treatment cycles | ≤ 6 | 46 (66.67) | 18 (58.06) | 0.500d |
| > 6 | 23 (33.33) | 13 (41.94) | ||
aStudent’s t-test
bChi2 test
cICD-O: Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), B27; Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma EBV +, B28; Follicular lymphoma grade 3B, B41; Plasmablatic lymphoma, B45; Association of diffuse large cell and follicular B cell NHL, C05; Aggressive B-cell lymphoma unclassifiable, C14; Large B-cell lymphoma with IRF4 rearrangement, C18
dFisher’s exact test
eModerate chemotherapy: R-mini-CHOP, R-CHOP-21
fIntensive chemotherapy: R-CHOP-14, R-ACVBP, and R-Experimental therapy
Characteristics of female (N = 26) and male (N = 31) participants who answered the Lymphoma Quality of Life questionnaire
| Characteristics | Female | Male | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Socio-demographic characteristics | ||||
| Age at entry into the RT3 Study (years) | 58.2 (15.8) | 58.7 (15) | 0.886a | |
| 26–84 | 20–79 | |||
| Duration between inclusion in the RT3 Study and the answer to the LQL questionnaire (months) | 12.9 (2.2) | 13.4 (2.7) | 0.410a | |
| 7–19 | 7–21 | |||
| Age | ||||
| < 60 | 12 (46.15) | 14 (45.16) | 0.940c | |
| ≥ 60b | 14 (53.85) | 17 (54.84) | ||
| Living | ||||
| Alone | 6 (23.08) | 6 (20) | 0.780c | |
| As a couple | 20 (76.92) | 24 (80) | ||
| Professionally active | ||||
| Yes | 10 (38.46) | 13 (43.33) | 0.712c | |
| No | 16 (61.54) | 17 (56.67) | ||
| Actual financial level | ||||
| Comfortable | 11 (42.31) | 9 (30) | 0.644d | |
| Neither at ease nor in difficulty | 13 (50) | 19 (63.33) | ||
| In difficulty or in great difficulty | 2 (7.69) | 2 (6.67) | ||
| Questionnaire | ||||
| Version | Online | 7 (26.92) | 6 (19.35) | 0.498c |
| Paper | 19 (73.08) | 25 (80.65) | ||
| Response time after enrolment in the study (month) | ≤ 13 | 19 (73.08) | 18 (58.06) | 0.237c |
| > 13 | 7 (26.92) | 13 (41.94) | ||
| Responses given during the COVID-19 period | Yes | 19 (73.08) | 23 (74.19) | 0.924c |
| No | 7 (26.92) | 8 (25.81) | ||
| Health-related characteristics | ||||
| Ann Arbor Stage | ||||
| I–II | 9 (34.62) | 14 (45.16) | 0.419c | |
| III–IV | 17 (65.38) | 17 (54.84) | ||
| HANS results | ||||
| Germinal centre B-cell–like (GCB) | 11 (47.83) | 12 (42.86) | 0.723c | |
| Non-GCB | 12 (52.17) | 16 (57.14) | ||
| ICD-Oe | ||||
| DLBCL | 15 (65.22) | 26 (89.66) | 0.110d | |
| Primary mediastinal large B-cell lymphoma (PMBL) | 4 (17.39) | 2 (6.90) | ||
| High grade B-cell lymphoma with double/triple-hit or NOS (HGBL) / DLBCL not otherwise specified (DLBCL-NOS) | 4 (17.39) | 1 (3.45) | ||
| Comorbidities | ||||
| Type 2 diabetes | Yes | 0 (0) | 4 (12.90) | 0.118d |
| No | 26 (100) | 27 (87.10) | ||
| Arterial hypertension | Yes | 5 (19.23) | 11 (35.48) | 0.174c |
| No | 21 (80.77) | 20 (64.52) | ||
| Cardiovascular illnesses | Yes | 3 (11.54) | 6 (19.35) | 0.488d |
| No | 23 (88.46) | 25 (80.65) | ||
| Cancer (other) | Yes | 1 (3.85) | 2 (6.45) | 0.999d |
| No | 25 (96.15) | 29 (93.55) | ||
| Comorbidities (at least one) | Yes | 8 (30.77) | 17 (54.84) | 0.068c |
| No | 18 (69.23) | 14 (45.16) | ||
| Mood disorders | ||||
| HADS Anxiety | ≤ 7 (no cases) | 17 (65.38) | 22 (70.97) | 0.918d |
| 8 to 10 (doubtful cases) | 4 (15.38) | 3 (9.68) | ||
| ≥ 11 (severe cases) | 5 (19.23) | 6 (19.35) | ||
| HADS Depression | ≤ 7 (no cases) | 17 (65.38) | 24 (77.42) | 0.462d |
| 8 to 10 (doubtful cases) | 7 (26.92) | 4 (12.9) | ||
| ≥ 11 (severe cases) | 2 (7.69) | 3 (9.68) | ||
| Treatments | ||||
| Chemotherapy | Moderate (conventional)f | 14 (53.85) | 20 (64.52) | 0.414c |
| Intensiveg | 12 (46.15) | 11 (35.48) | ||
| Number of treatment cycles | ≤ 6 | 17 (65.38) | 20 (64.52) | 0.945c |
| > 6 | 9 (34.62) | 11 (35.48) |
aStudent’s t-test
bWomen: N = 3 ≥ 80 years
cChi2 test
dFisher’s exact test
eICD-O: Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma (DLBCL), B27; Diffuse large B-cell lymphoma EBV +, B28; Follicular lymphoma grade 3B, B41; Plasmablatic lymphoma, B45; Association of diffuse large cell and follicular B-cell NHL, C05; Aggressive B-cell lymphoma unclassifiable, C14; Large B-cell lymphoma with IRF4 rearrangement, C18
fModerate (conventional) chemotherapy: R-mini-CHOP, R-CHOP-21
gIntensive chemotherapy: R-CHOP-14, R-ACVBP, and Rituximab + Experimental therapy
Comparisons of the different psychometric scales between female (N = 26) and male (N = 31) participants in the Lymphoma Quality of Life Study
| Scales/subscales | Sex | Comparison | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Female ( | Male ( | ||
| Adjusted mean [95% CI]a | Adjusted mean [95% CI]a | ||
| EORTC QLQ-C30 (v3) | |||
| Global health statusb | 64.37 [55.04–73.70] | 67.95 [60.13–75.78] | 0.504 |
| Functional scalesc | |||
| Physical functioning | 70.86 [61.99–79.73] | 82.10 [74.66–89.53] | 0.031 |
| Role functioning | 74.76 [63.57–85.95] | 84.85 [75.47–94.23] | 0.120 |
| Emotional functioning | 70.08 [56.98–83.18] | 78.52 [67.54–89.50] | 0.263 |
| Cognitive functioning | 76.45 [65.05–87.85] | 79.24 [69.68–88.80] | 0.670 |
| Social functioning | 76.29 [64.93–87.64] | 80.42 [70.91–89.94] | 0.525 |
| Symptom scales/itemsd | |||
| Fatigue | 48.46 [35.32–61.60] | 37.25 [26.23–48.26] | 0.141 |
| Nausea and vomiting | 4.39 [(−2.35)–11.11] | 2.20 [(−3.44)–7.84] | 0.572 |
| Pain | 32.12 [18.04–46.19] | 20.00 [8.20–31.79] | 0.137 |
| Dyspnoea | 29.08 [15.58–42.57] | 24.83 [13.52–36.14] | 0.584 |
| Insomnia | 32.81 [16.82–48.80] | 19.37 [5.96–32.77] | 0.147 |
| Appetite loss | 14.26 [0.53–27.99] | 5.12 [(−6.39)–16.63] | 0.248 |
| Constipation | 27.94 [15.66–40.23] | 11.69 [1.39–21.98] | 0.025 |
| Diarrhoea | 13.92 [5.36–22.48] | 7.55 [0.37–14.72] | 0.198 |
| Financial difficulties | 12.74 [2.75–22.73] | 17.37 [9.00–25.74] | 0.420 |
| EORTC QLQ-NHL-HG29e | |||
| Symptom burden | 31.82 [21.52–42.11] | 21.22 [12.59–29.85] | 0.077 |
| Neuropathy | 27.67 [13.59–41.76] | 36.91 [25.10–48.71] | 0.256 |
| Physical condition / fatigue | 37.43 [23.71–51.15] | 28.90 [17.40–40.41] | 0.281 |
| Emotional impact | 30.50 [17.91–43.09] | 23.40 [12.84–33.95] | 0.327 |
| Worries / fears about health and functioning | 37.00 [25.23–48.78] | 36.00 [26.13–45.87] | 0.882 |
| HADSf | |||
| Anxiety | 7.62 [5.45–9.80] | 5.76 [3.94–7.59] | 0.141 |
| Depression | 6.67 [4.76–8.58] | 5.89 [4.29–7.49] | 0.473 |
| PTGIg | |||
| Relating to others | 21.63 [18.36–24.90] | 17.22 [14.48–19.96] | 0.022 |
| New possibilities | 11.25 [8.45–14.05] | 9.08 [6.74–11.43] | 0.181 |
| Personal strength | 10.47 [8.03–12.90] | 9.34 [7.30–11.38] | 0.421 |
| Spiritual changes | 4.12 [2.64–5.60] | 3.37 [2.13–4.61] | 0.379 |
| Appreciation of life | 9.60 [7.98–11.23] | 7.78 [6.42–9.15] | 0.056 |
| PTGI total score | 57.06 [47.63–66.50] | 46.79 [38.88–54.70] | 0.062 |
| MFI-20h | |||
| General fatigue | 12.14 [9.96–14.32] | 11.28 [9.45–13.11] | 0.494 |
| Physical fatigue | 11.76 [9.46–14.05] | 12.11 [10.19–14.03] | 0.788 |
| Mental fatigue | 9.38 [7.33–11.42] | 9.70 [7.98–11.41] | 0.783 |
| Reduction of activities | 10.15 [7.99–12.31] | 9.27 [7.46–11.08] | 0.478 |
| Reduction of motivation | 11.66 [9.60–13.72] | 11.34 [9.62–13.07] | 0.787 |
| MFI-20 total score | 55.09 [45.78–64.40] | 53.71 [45.90–61.51] | 0.796 |
aModel adjusted on age at entry into the RT3 study (1: ≥ 60, 0: < 60 years), duration between inclusion in the RT3 study and the answer to the questionnaire (1: > 13, 0: ≤ 13 months), number of treatment cycles (1: > 6, 0: ≤ 6 cycles), Ann Arbor stage (1: III–IV, 0: I–II), comorbidities (type 2 diabetes/arterial hypertension/cardiovascular diseases/other cancer: 1: yes / 0: no), therapy followed (1: R-CHOP-14, R-ACVBP, R-Experimental therapy; 0: mini-R-CHOP and R-CHOP-21), and response during COVID-19 period (1: yes, 0: no)
bA high score for the Global health status represents a high QoL [Fayers et al., 2001]
cA high score for a functional scale represents a high/healthy level of functioning [Fayers et al., 2001]
dA high score for a symptom scale or item represents a high level of symptomatology or problems [Fayers et al., 2001]
eA high score for all of the multi-item scales represents a high level of symptomatology or problems [van de Poll-Franse et al., 2018; Fayers et al., 2001]
fA score of 0 to 7 for either subscale could be regarded as being in the normal range, a score of 8 to 10 being just suggestive of a doubtful symptomatology, and a score of 11 or higher indicating presence of the mood disorder [Snaith, 2003]
gPost-traumatic development increases with the calculated score [Tedeschi et al., 1996]
hHigh scores represent high levels of fatigue. The total score is calculated by adding the scores of 5 subscales
Comparison of adjusted HRQoL scores from different psychometric scales according to comorbidities (N = 57)
| Comorbiditiesa | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Scales/subscales | Without comorbidities ( | With comorbidities ( | |
Adjusted mean [95% CI of adjusted mean] | Adjusted mean [95% CI of adjusted mean] | ||
| EORTC QLQ-C30 (v3)b | |||
| Global health status | 73.45 [65.11–81.78] | 58.88 [49.33–68.42] | 0.017 |
| Functional scalesc | |||
| Physical functioning | 82.54 [74.61–90.47] | 70.42 [61.35–79.49] | 0.035 |
| Role functioning | 81.29 [71.29–91.29] | 78.32 [66.87–89.77] | 0.675 |
| Emotional functioning | 76.05 [64.34–87.75] | 72.56 [59.16–85.95] | 0.674 |
| Cognitive functioning | 79.58 [69.40–89.77] | 76.11 [64.45–87.77] | 0.630 |
| Social functioning | 80.40 [70.25–90.55] | 76.31 [64.70–87.92] | 0.569 |
| Items/scalesd | |||
| Fatigue | 38.56 [26.82–50.30] | 47.15 [33.71–60.59] | 0.303 |
| Nausea and vomiting | 1.62 [(−4.39)–7.63] | 4.96 [(−1.92)–11.84] | 0.434 |
| Pain | 24.80 [12.23–37.37] | 27.31 [12.92–41.70] | 0.778 |
| Dyspnoea | 21.70 [9.64–33.75] | 32.21 [18.41–46.01] | 0.221 |
| Insomnia | 22.96 [8.67–37.25] | 29.22 [12.87–45.57] | 0.536 |
| Appetite loss | 5.79 [(−6.48)–18.06] | 13.59 [(−0.45)–27.63] | 0.370 |
| Constipation | 15.80 [4.83–26.78] | 23.83 [11.27–36.39] | 0.303 |
| Diarrhoea | 9.36 [1.71–17.01] | 12.10 [3.35–20.86] | 0.612 |
| Financial difficulties | 10.32 [1.39–19.24] | 19.79 [9.58–30.01] | 0.138 |
| EORTC QLQ-NHL-HG29e | |||
| Symptom burden | 18.79 [9.59–27.99] | 34.24 [23.71–44.77] | 0.021 |
| Neuropathy | 27.04 [14.46–39.63] | 37.54 [23.13–51.94] | 0.242 |
| Physical condition / fatigue | 23.47 [11.21–35.73] | 42.87 [28.83–56.90] | 0.029 |
| Emotional impact | 20.04 [8.79–31.29] | 33.86 [20.98–46.73] | 0.087 |
| Worries/fears about health and functioning | 30.72 [20.20–41.24] | 42.28 [30.24–54.33] | 0.125 |
| HADSf | |||
| Depression | 4.83 [3.12–6.53] | 7.73 [5.78–9.68] | 0.019 |
| Anxiety | 6.74 [4.79–8.69] | 6.65 [4.42–8.87] | 0.946 |
| PTGIg | |||
| Relating to others | 19.23 [16.31–22.15] | 19.62 [16.28–22.97] | 0.848 |
| New possibilities | 10.58 [8.08–13.08] | 9.75 [6.89–12.62] | 0.641 |
| Personal strength | 10.06 [7.88–12.24] | 9.74 [7.25–12.24] | 0.837 |
| Spiritual changes | 3.71 [2.38–5.03] | 3.78 [2.26–5.29] | 0.941 |
| Appreciation of life | 9.17 [7.72–10.63] | 8.22 [6.55–9.88] | 0.354 |
| PTGI total score | 52.75 [44.32–61.18] | 51.11 [41.46–60.76] | 0.784 |
| MFI-20h | |||
| General fatigue | 10.65 [8.70–12.60] | 12.77 [10.54–15.01] | 0.128 |
| Physical fatigue | 10.59 [8.54–12.63] | 13.28 [10.94–15.62] | 0.068 |
| Mental fatigue | 8.24 [6.42–10.07] | 10.83 [8.74–12.92] | 0.049 |
| Reduction of activities | 9.39 [7.46–11.32] | 10.04 [7.83–12.25] | 0.637 |
| Reduction of motivation | 11.02 [9.18–12.86] | 11.99 [9.88–14.09] | 0.460 |
| MFI-20 total score | 49.89 [41.57–58.21] | 58.90 [49.38–68.43] | 0.130 |
aModel adjusted on age at entry into the RT3 study (1: ≥ 60, 0: < 60 years), sex (1: male, 0: female), duration between inclusion in the RT3 study and the answer to the questionnaire (1: > 13, 0: ≤ 13 months), number of treatment cycles (1: > 6, 0: ≤ 6 cycles), Ann Arbor stage (1: III–IV, 0: I–II), therapy followed (1: R-CHOP-21, R-ACVBP, and R-Experimental therapy; 0: R-mini-CHOP and R-CHOP14), and response during COVID-19 period (1: yes, 0: no)
bA high score for the Global health status represents a high QoL [Fayers et al., 2001]
cA high score for a functional scale represents a high/healthy level of functioning [Fayers et al., 2001]
dA high score for a symptom scale or item represents a high level of symptomatology or problems [Fayers et al., 2001]
eA high score for all of the Multi-item scales represents a high level of symptomatology or problems [van de Poll-Franse et al., 2018; Fayers et al., 2001]
fA score of 0 to 7 for either subscale could be regarded as being in the normal range, a score of 8 to 10 being just suggestive of a doubtful symptomatology, and a score of 11 or higher indicating presence of the mood disorder [Snaith, 2003]
gPost-traumatic development increases with the calculated score [Tedeschi et al., 1996]
hHigh scores represent high levels of fatigue. The total score is calculated by adding the scores of 5 subscales
Comparison of adjusted symptom scores measured with EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-NHL-HG29 scales according to number of chemotherapy cycles (N = 57)
| Number of treatment cyclesa | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| ≤ 6 cycles ( | > 6 cycles ( | ||
| Symptom scales/itemsb | Adjusted mean [95% CI] | Adjusted mean [95% CI] | |
| Fatiguec | 37.10 [24.86–49.34] | 48.60 [35.16–62.05] | 0.188 |
| Painc | 16.62 [3.51–29.73] | 35.49 [21.09–49.88] | 0.046 |
| Dyspnoeac | 17.26 [4.69–29.83] | 36.65 [22.85–50.46] | 0.033 |
| Insomniac | 31.02 [16.12–45.91] | 21.16 [4.80–37.51] | 0.351 |
| Nausea and vomitingc | 3.60 [(−2.67)–9.87] | 2.98 [(−3.90)–9.86] | 0.889 |
| Appetite lossc | 8.32 [(−4.47)–21.11] | 11.06 [(−2.98)–25.11] | 0.762 |
| Constipationc | 17.43 [5.99–28.88] | 22.20 [9.63–34.76] | 0.557 |
| Diarrhoeac | 10.96 [2.98–18.93] | 10.51 [1.75–19.26] | 0.936 |
| Neuropathyd | 19.93 [6.81–33.05] | 44.65 [30.24–59.06] | 0.010 |
| Symptom burdend | 21.99 [12.40–31.58] | 31.05 [20.51–41.58] | 0.186 |
aModel adjusted on age at entry into the RT3 study (1: ≥ 60, 0: < 60 years), sex (1: male, 0: female), duration between inclusion in the RT3 study and the answer to the questionnaire (1: > 13, 0: ≤ 13 months), comorbidities (1: yes, 0: no), Ann Arbor stage (1: III–IV, 0: I–II), therapy followed (1: R-CHOP-21, R-ACVBP, and R-Experimental therapy; 0: R-mini-CHOP and R-CHOP14), and response during COVID-19 period (1: yes, 0: no)
bA high score for a symptom scale or item represents a high level of symptomatology or problems [Fayers et al., 2001; van de Poll-Franse et al., 2018]
cMeasured with EORTC QLQ-C30 (v3)
dMeasured with EORTC QLQ-NHL-HG29
Fig. 2.Comparisons of EORTC QLQ-C30 scores of DLBCL patients participating in the Lymphoma Quality of Life Study and general French population reference values. EORTC QLQ-C30 mean scores in DLBCL patients and reference values in France [Nolte et al., 2019]. Abbreviations: QL, global health status; PF, physical functioning; RF, role functioning; EF, emotional functioning; CF, cognitive function; SF, social functioning; FA, fatigue; NV, nausea and vomiting; PA, pain; DY, dyspnoea; SL, insomnia; AP, appetite loss; CO, constipation; DI, diarrhoea; FI, financial difficulties. ** P < 0.01; * P < 0.05