| Literature DB >> 34885043 |
Romy M van Amelsfoort1, Karen van der Sluis2, Winnie Schats3, Edwin P M Jansen1, Johanna W van Sandick2, Marcel Verheij1,4, Iris Walraven5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Current treatment strategies have been designed to improve survival in locally advanced gastric cancer patients. Besides its impact on survival, treatment also affects health-related quality of life (HRQOL), but an overview of reported studies is currently lacking. The aim of this systematic review was therefore to determine the short- and long-term impact of chemotherapy, surgery, and (chemo)radiotherapy on HRQOL in locally advanced, non-metastatic gastric cancer patients.Entities:
Keywords: curative treatment; gastric cancer; health-related quality of life
Year: 2021 PMID: 34885043 PMCID: PMC8657098 DOI: 10.3390/cancers13235934
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cancers (Basel) ISSN: 2072-6694 Impact factor: 6.639
Figure 1Flowchart of included studies.
Included studies, baseline demographics.
| Study | Study Design | Inclusion Years | Country | HRQOL Measures | Intervention | No. of Patients | Mean Age (Years) | Gender (Male) | Risk of Bias |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Avery 2010 | Cohort | 2000–2004 | United Kingdom | QLQ-C30, QLQ-STO22 | HRQOL of patients with potentially | 58 | 70 vs. 72 | 78% | Some |
| Brenkman 2018 | Cross-sectional | 2001–2015 | The Netherlands | QLQ-C30, QLQ-STO22 | HRQOL after gastrectomy vs. reference population | 222 | 68 | 66% | Low |
| Goody 2016/ | Case-series | 2002–2013/ 2022–2007 | Canada | QLQ-C30 | Radiotherapy + 12 weeks 5-FU + escalating doses cisplatin | 55/33 | 54/56 | 55% | Low |
| Huang 2017 | Cross-sectional | 2014–2016 | China | QLQ-C30, QLQ-STO22 | Isoperistaltic anastomosis vs. Roux-en-Y anastomosis on HRQOL′ | 89 | 61.6 | 76% | Some |
| Jakstaite 2012 | Cross-sectional | 2008–2009 | Lithuania | QLQ-C30 | HRQOL 6–18 months post-surgery (+ adjuvant chemotherapy) | 34 | 64 | 59% | Low |
| Kinami 2020 | Cross-sectional | 2009–2014 | Japan | PGSAS-45 | Post-gastrectomy syndrome > 1 year post-partial gastrectomy. | 22 | 68.3 | 64% | Some |
| Munene 2012 | Cohort | 2001–2007 | Canada | FACT-G & FACT-Ga | HRQOL following gastrectomy | 43 | 65 | 51% | Low |
| Park 2020 | Cohort | 2011–2014 | Korea | QLQ-C30, QLQ- | HRQOL before and following total | 300 | 59 vs. 63 | 70% | Some |
| STO22 | gastrectomy and distal gastrectomy | ||||||||
| Xia 2020 | Cross-sectional | 2016–2017 | China | EQ-5D | HRQOL in patients with gastric cancer | 752 | NR | 75.2 vs. 68.7% | Low |
| Zygogianni 2018 | Cross-sectional | 2005–2014 | Greece | QLQ-C30 | HRQOL after completion of adjuvant radiotherapy: | 97 | 63 | 80% | Low |
* = Same study, combined analysis; HRQOL = Health-related quality of life; NR = not reported.
Summary of studies evaluating HRQOL.
| Study | Aim study | Timepoints | Short-Term Impact on HRQOL | Long-Term Impact on HRQOL (>6 Months) |
|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| HRQOL before and after potentially curative gastrectomy | Prior to surgery |
Physical, role, and social functioning were impaired at 6 weeks post-surgery and started to recover at 3 months post-surgery. Increase reported in appetite loss, diarrhea, and eating restrictions. |
Global QOL, physical, role, and social functioning were recovered at 6 months. Diarrhea did not recover to baseline. Nausea/vomiting, diarrhea, pain, reflux, dry mouth, and sleep difficulties still reported in 50% of patients 6 months after surgery. Over 70% of patients reported fatigue and eating problems. |
| (QLQ-C30, QLQ-STO22) | ||||
|
| HRQOL after gastrectomy vs. reference population | Post-surgery (range 1 month–5 years) |
All functioning scores were impaired compared to the reference population (except for emotional functioning and global QOL). All symptom scores were impaired compared to the reference population (except for pain, insomnia, and constipation). Patients undergoing neoadjuvant therapy, distal gastrectomy, or minimal invasive surgery had better HRQOL scores. Female gender was a predictive factor for nausea and vomiting, insomnia, appetite loss, diarrhea, body image, eating restrictions, and hair loss. | |
| (QLQ-C30, QLQ- STO22) | ||||
|
| HRQOL after Isoperistaltic anastomosis (IJOM) vs. Roux-en-Y anastomosis after totally laparoscopic total gastrectomy | Post-surgery at: 6 months |
Functioning scores were comparable in both groups. Pain and dysphagia were experienced less in the IJOM group. | |
| (QLQ-C30, QLQ-STO22) | ||||
|
| HRQOL in relation to age, sex, clinical stage, postoperative complication, and adjuvant chemotherapy after total gastrectomy | Post-surgery (range 6–18 months) |
Role, emotional, social, and global QOL were worse in patients ≤ 65 years (clinically relevant *). A significant difference was observed in social functioning and global QOL. Role functioning was worse in male patients compared to female (clinically relevant *, ns). Global QOL, physical, role, cognitive, and social functioning scored worse in patients with a more advanced stage of disease (clinically relevant *, ns). Fatigue, nausea/vomiting, and insomnia were more common in patients ≤ 65 years and female patients (clinically relevant *, ns). Pain was more common in patients ≤ 65 years (clinically relevant *, ns). Constipation was more common in female patients, patients < 65 years, and patients with stage III (clinically relevant *, ns). Dyspnea, appetite loss, and diarrhea were more common in patients with lower stages of disease (clinically relevant *, ns). | |
| (QLQ-C30) | ||||
|
| HRQOL after chemoradiation | Post-surgery |
Global QOL, role, and social functioning significantly declined after completion of radiation (clinically relevant *). Functioning scores recovered 4 weeks after receiving chemotherapy Fatigue, nausea, and vomiting were significantly worse after completing radiotherapy (clinically relevant *). Four weeks after chemotherapy, complaints of fatigue remained. | No functioning or symptom scores differed statistically from baseline at one year. |
| (QLQ-C30) | ||||
|
| Post-gastrectomy syndrome/ HRQOL > 1 year after partial gastrectomy (early vs. advanced stages) | Post-surgery (>1 year) |
Dumping subscale was scored worse in patients with less stomach remnant. No differences in living status were observed between early and advanced gastric cancer patients. No difference in QOL between early and advanced gastric cancer patients. | |
| (PGSAS-45) | ||||
|
| HRQOL after gastrectomy | Prior to surgery |
HRQOL is deteriorated 3 months after gastrectomy for both total and partial gastrectomy. |
HRQOL recovered after 6 months, for both total gastrectomy and partial gastrectomy. |
| (FACT-G, FACT-Ga) | ||||
|
| HRQOL before and after total gastrectomy (TG) and distal gastrectomy (DG) | Prior to surgery |
Physical and role functioning were significantly worse in the TG group compared to the DG group after 2 and 3 years. Complaints in pain, reflux, eating restrictions, and anxiety were reported significantly more often in the TG group at all timepoints post-surgery. Fatigue and body image were reported significantly worse in the TG group after 2 and 3 years. The TG group scored worse for taste at 1 and 3 years post-surgery. | |
| (QLQ-C30, QLQ- STO22) | ||||
|
| HRQOL in patients with gastric cancer vs. healthy references | >1 year post diagnosis |
The mean EQ-5D utility score is significantly lower than the healthy controls. As well as the mean EQ-VAS score. The proportion of patients with problems in all 5 dimensions (pain, anxiety, self-care, usual activities, and mobility) is higher in patients with locally advanced gastric cancer. | |
| (EQ-5D) | ||||
|
| HRQOL after chemoradiation, (anterior-posterior vs. multifield | Post-chemoradiation |
Global QOL scored nearly twice as much in the three-dimensional multifield group. Appetite loss and diarrhea were significantly better in the three-dimensional multifield group. | |
| (QLQ-C30) |
* Clinically relevant = at least a difference of 10 points was observed between two measured groups; ns = not significant.