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What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study

SIMPLE SUMMARY: Quality of life has a different meaning for every individual. In older patients with cancer, quality of life is important because anti-cancer treatment may influence their quality of life. In order to assess the aspects of quality of life that matter most to older patients with cance...

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Autores principales: Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke), Kregting, Jolina A., van Huis-Tanja, Lieke H., Soubeyran, Pierre, O’Hanlon, Shane, Rostoft, Siri, Hamaker, Marije E., Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: MDPI 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8909907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35267431
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123
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author Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Kregting, Jolina A.
van Huis-Tanja, Lieke H.
Soubeyran, Pierre
O’Hanlon, Shane
Rostoft, Siri
Hamaker, Marije E.
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
author_facet Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Kregting, Jolina A.
van Huis-Tanja, Lieke H.
Soubeyran, Pierre
O’Hanlon, Shane
Rostoft, Siri
Hamaker, Marije E.
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
author_sort Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
collection PubMed
description SIMPLE SUMMARY: Quality of life has a different meaning for every individual. In older patients with cancer, quality of life is important because anti-cancer treatment may influence their quality of life. In order to assess the aspects of quality of life that matter most to older patients with cancer, we interviewed 63 patients. We used both open-ended questions and asked them to select the most important items from a predefined list: cognition, contact with family or with community, independence, staying in your own home, helping others, having enough energy, emotional well-being, life satisfaction, religion and leisure activities. Physical functioning, social functioning, physical health and cognition are important components of quality of life. In conclusion, maintaining cognition and independence, staying in one’s own home, and maintaining contact with family and community appear to be the most important aspects of quality of life for older patients with cancer. These aspects should be included when making a shared treatment decision. ABSTRACT: The treatment of cancer can have a significant impact on quality of life in older patients and this needs to be taken into account in decision making. However, quality of life can consist of many different components with varying importance between individuals. We set out to assess how older patients with cancer define quality of life and the components that are most significant to them. This was a single-centre, qualitative interview study. Patients aged 70 years or older with cancer were asked to answer open-ended questions: What makes life worthwhile? What does quality of life mean to you? What could affect your quality of life? Subsequently, they were asked to choose the five most important determinants of quality of life from a predefined list: cognition, contact with family or with community, independence, staying in your own home, helping others, having enough energy, emotional well-being, life satisfaction, religion and leisure activities. Afterwards, answers to the open-ended questions were independently categorized by two authors. The proportion of patients mentioning each category in the open-ended questions were compared to the predefined questions. Overall, 63 patients (median age 76 years) were included. When asked, “What makes life worthwhile?”, patients identified social functioning (86%) most frequently. Moreover, to define quality of life, patients most frequently mentioned categories in the domains of physical functioning (70%) and physical health (48%). Maintaining cognition was mentioned in 17% of the open-ended questions and it was the most commonly chosen option from the list of determinants (72% of respondents). In conclusion, physical functioning, social functioning, physical health and cognition are important components in quality of life. When discussing treatment options, the impact of treatment on these aspects should be taken into consideration.
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spelling pubmed-89099072022-03-11 What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke) Kregting, Jolina A. van Huis-Tanja, Lieke H. Soubeyran, Pierre O’Hanlon, Shane Rostoft, Siri Hamaker, Marije E. Portielje, Johanneke E. A. Cancers (Basel) Article SIMPLE SUMMARY: Quality of life has a different meaning for every individual. In older patients with cancer, quality of life is important because anti-cancer treatment may influence their quality of life. In order to assess the aspects of quality of life that matter most to older patients with cancer, we interviewed 63 patients. We used both open-ended questions and asked them to select the most important items from a predefined list: cognition, contact with family or with community, independence, staying in your own home, helping others, having enough energy, emotional well-being, life satisfaction, religion and leisure activities. Physical functioning, social functioning, physical health and cognition are important components of quality of life. In conclusion, maintaining cognition and independence, staying in one’s own home, and maintaining contact with family and community appear to be the most important aspects of quality of life for older patients with cancer. These aspects should be included when making a shared treatment decision. ABSTRACT: The treatment of cancer can have a significant impact on quality of life in older patients and this needs to be taken into account in decision making. However, quality of life can consist of many different components with varying importance between individuals. We set out to assess how older patients with cancer define quality of life and the components that are most significant to them. This was a single-centre, qualitative interview study. Patients aged 70 years or older with cancer were asked to answer open-ended questions: What makes life worthwhile? What does quality of life mean to you? What could affect your quality of life? Subsequently, they were asked to choose the five most important determinants of quality of life from a predefined list: cognition, contact with family or with community, independence, staying in your own home, helping others, having enough energy, emotional well-being, life satisfaction, religion and leisure activities. Afterwards, answers to the open-ended questions were independently categorized by two authors. The proportion of patients mentioning each category in the open-ended questions were compared to the predefined questions. Overall, 63 patients (median age 76 years) were included. When asked, “What makes life worthwhile?”, patients identified social functioning (86%) most frequently. Moreover, to define quality of life, patients most frequently mentioned categories in the domains of physical functioning (70%) and physical health (48%). Maintaining cognition was mentioned in 17% of the open-ended questions and it was the most commonly chosen option from the list of determinants (72% of respondents). In conclusion, physical functioning, social functioning, physical health and cognition are important components in quality of life. When discussing treatment options, the impact of treatment on these aspects should be taken into consideration. MDPI 2022-02-22 /pmc/articles/PMC8909907/ /pubmed/35267431 http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123 Text en © 2022 by the authors. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Article
Seghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke)
Kregting, Jolina A.
van Huis-Tanja, Lieke H.
Soubeyran, Pierre
O’Hanlon, Shane
Rostoft, Siri
Hamaker, Marije E.
Portielje, Johanneke E. A.
What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title_full What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title_fullStr What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title_full_unstemmed What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title_short What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
title_sort what defines quality of life for older patients diagnosed with cancer? a qualitative study
topic Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8909907/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35267431
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123
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