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Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study

BACKGROUND: The mental wellbeing implications of a prostate cancer diagnosis are increasingly being realised. Significant mental health symptoms such as depression and anxiety, along with related constructs such as fear of cancer recurrence, body image and masculine self-esteem issues are prevalent....

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Autores principales: Brunckhorst, Oliver, Liszka, Jaroslaw, James, Callum, Fanshawe, Jack B., Hammadeh, Mohamed, Thomas, Robert, Khan, Shahid, Sheriff, Matin, Ahmed, Hashim U., Van Hemelrijck, Mieke, Muir, Gordon, Stewart, Robert, Dasgupta, Prokar, Ahmed, Kamran
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37093833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284727
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author Brunckhorst, Oliver
Liszka, Jaroslaw
James, Callum
Fanshawe, Jack B.
Hammadeh, Mohamed
Thomas, Robert
Khan, Shahid
Sheriff, Matin
Ahmed, Hashim U.
Van Hemelrijck, Mieke
Muir, Gordon
Stewart, Robert
Dasgupta, Prokar
Ahmed, Kamran
author_facet Brunckhorst, Oliver
Liszka, Jaroslaw
James, Callum
Fanshawe, Jack B.
Hammadeh, Mohamed
Thomas, Robert
Khan, Shahid
Sheriff, Matin
Ahmed, Hashim U.
Van Hemelrijck, Mieke
Muir, Gordon
Stewart, Robert
Dasgupta, Prokar
Ahmed, Kamran
author_sort Brunckhorst, Oliver
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The mental wellbeing implications of a prostate cancer diagnosis are increasingly being realised. Significant mental health symptoms such as depression and anxiety, along with related constructs such as fear of cancer recurrence, body image and masculine self-esteem issues are prevalent. However, less is understood about potential prognostic factors for these outcomes in prostate cancer patients. Therefore, this study aims to primarily explore potential treatment, patient and oncological factors associated with mental wellbeing outcomes in the initial prostate cancer follow-up period. METHODS: MIND-P is a multi-institutional prospective cohort study recruiting newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients for 12-month follow up. It will aim to recruit a final sample of 300 participants undergoing one of four treatment options: active surveillance, radical prostatectomy, radical radiotherapy, or hormone monotherapy. Questionnaire-based data collection consists of multiple validated mental, physical, and social wellbeing outcomes at baseline and 3-monthly intervals until study completion. Primary analysis will include evaluation of treatment undergone against multiple mental wellbeing outcomes. Secondary analysis will additionally explore multiple patient and oncological prognostic factors of potential importance, along with the cumulative incidence of these outcomes, symptom trajectory and their association with subsequent functional and social outcomes. CONCLUSION: This cohort study aims to add to the existing limited literature evaluating significant prognostic factors for multiple mental wellbeing outcomes in newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients. This may be of potential use for guiding future prognosis research and of clinical use for identifying individuals potentially requiring additional surveillance or support during routine cancer follow up. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study was prospectively registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04647474).
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spelling pubmed-101248302023-04-25 Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study Brunckhorst, Oliver Liszka, Jaroslaw James, Callum Fanshawe, Jack B. Hammadeh, Mohamed Thomas, Robert Khan, Shahid Sheriff, Matin Ahmed, Hashim U. Van Hemelrijck, Mieke Muir, Gordon Stewart, Robert Dasgupta, Prokar Ahmed, Kamran PLoS One Study Protocol BACKGROUND: The mental wellbeing implications of a prostate cancer diagnosis are increasingly being realised. Significant mental health symptoms such as depression and anxiety, along with related constructs such as fear of cancer recurrence, body image and masculine self-esteem issues are prevalent. However, less is understood about potential prognostic factors for these outcomes in prostate cancer patients. Therefore, this study aims to primarily explore potential treatment, patient and oncological factors associated with mental wellbeing outcomes in the initial prostate cancer follow-up period. METHODS: MIND-P is a multi-institutional prospective cohort study recruiting newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients for 12-month follow up. It will aim to recruit a final sample of 300 participants undergoing one of four treatment options: active surveillance, radical prostatectomy, radical radiotherapy, or hormone monotherapy. Questionnaire-based data collection consists of multiple validated mental, physical, and social wellbeing outcomes at baseline and 3-monthly intervals until study completion. Primary analysis will include evaluation of treatment undergone against multiple mental wellbeing outcomes. Secondary analysis will additionally explore multiple patient and oncological prognostic factors of potential importance, along with the cumulative incidence of these outcomes, symptom trajectory and their association with subsequent functional and social outcomes. CONCLUSION: This cohort study aims to add to the existing limited literature evaluating significant prognostic factors for multiple mental wellbeing outcomes in newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients. This may be of potential use for guiding future prognosis research and of clinical use for identifying individuals potentially requiring additional surveillance or support during routine cancer follow up. STUDY REGISTRATION: This study was prospectively registered on ClinicalTrials.gov (NCT04647474). Public Library of Science 2023-04-24 /pmc/articles/PMC10124830/ /pubmed/37093833 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284727 Text en © 2023 Brunckhorst et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Study Protocol
Brunckhorst, Oliver
Liszka, Jaroslaw
James, Callum
Fanshawe, Jack B.
Hammadeh, Mohamed
Thomas, Robert
Khan, Shahid
Sheriff, Matin
Ahmed, Hashim U.
Van Hemelrijck, Mieke
Muir, Gordon
Stewart, Robert
Dasgupta, Prokar
Ahmed, Kamran
Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title_full Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title_fullStr Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title_short Mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (MIND-P): Protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
title_sort mental wellbeing and quality of life in prostate cancer (mind-p): protocol for a multi-institutional prospective cohort study
topic Study Protocol
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10124830/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37093833
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0284727
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