Long-Term Longitudinal Patterns of Patient-Reported Fatigue After Breast Cancer: A Group-Based Trajectory Analysis

Ines Vaz-Luis, Antonio Di Meglio, Julie Havas, Mayssam El-Mouhebb, Pietro Lapidari, Daniele Presti, Davide Soldato, Barbara Pistilli, Agnes Dumas, Gwenn Menvielle, Cecile Charles, Sibille Everhard, Anne Laure Martin, Paul H. Cottu, Florence Lerebours, Charles Coutant, Sarah Dauchy, Suzette Delaloge, Nancy U. Lin, Patricia A. GanzAnn H. Partridge, Fabrice André, Stefan Michiels

    Résultats de recherche: Contribution à un journalArticleRevue par des pairs

    22 Citations (Scopus)

    Résumé

    PURPOSEFatigue is recognized as one of the most burdensome and long-lasting adverse effects of cancer and cancer treatment. We aimed to characterize long-term fatigue trajectories among breast cancer survivors.METHODSWe performed a detailed longitudinal analysis of fatigue using a large ongoing national prospective clinical study (CANcer TOxicity, ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01993498) of patients with stage I-III breast cancer treated from 2012 to 2015. Fatigue was assessed at diagnosis and year 1, 2, and 4 postdiagnosis. Baseline clinical, sociodemographic, behavioral, tumor-related, and treatment-related characteristics were available. Trajectories of fatigue and risk factors of trajectory-group membership were identified by iterative estimates of group-based trajectory models.RESULTSThree trajectory groups were identified for severe global fatigue (n = 4,173). Twenty-one percent of patients were in the high-risk group, having risk estimates of severe global fatigue of 94.8% (95% CI, 86.6 to 100.0) at diagnosis and 64.6% (95% CI, 59.2 to 70.1) at year 4; 19% of patients clustered in the deteriorating group with risk estimates of severe global fatigue of 13.8% (95% CI, 6.7 to 20.9) at diagnosis and 64.5% (95% CI, 57.3 to 71.8) at year 4; 60% were in the low-risk group with risk estimates of 3.6% (95% CI, 2.5 to 4.7) at diagnosis and 9.6% (95% CI, 7.5 to 11.7) at year 4. The distinct dimensions of fatigue clustered in different trajectory groups than those identified by severe global fatigue, being differentially affected by sociodemographic, clinical, and treatment-related factors.CONCLUSIONOur findings highlight the multidimensional nature of cancer-related fatigue and the complexity of its risk factors. This study helps to identify patients with increased risk of severe fatigue and to inform personalized interventions to ameliorate this problem.

    langue originaleAnglais
    Pages (de - à)2148-2162
    Nombre de pages15
    journalJournal of Clinical Oncology
    Volume40
    Numéro de publication19
    Les DOIs
    étatPublié - 1 juil. 2022

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