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Cross‐sectional and longitudinal comparisons of health‐related quality of life between patients with prostate carcinoma and matched controls
Author(s) -
Hoffman Richard M.,
Gilliland Frank D.,
Penson David F.,
Stone S. Noell,
Hunt William C.,
Potosky Arnold L.
Publication year - 2004
Publication title -
cancer
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 3.052
H-Index - 304
eISSN - 1097-0142
pISSN - 0008-543X
DOI - 10.1002/cncr.20608
Subject(s) - medicine , prostate , quality of life (healthcare) , oncology , carcinoma , quality (philosophy) , prostate carcinoma , cross sectional study , prostate cancer , longitudinal study , cancer , gynecology , pathology , nursing , philosophy , epistemology
BACKGROUND Prostate carcinoma and treatments affect health‐related quality of life (HRQOL). The authors prospectively compared prostate and general HRQOL between prostate carcinoma cases and an age‐matched and ethnicity‐matched control group. METHODS The case cohort consisted of 293 men with localized prostate carcinoma who were selected randomly from the population‐based New Mexico Tumor Registry, and the control cohort consisted of 618 men who were selected randomly from administrative databases and matched for age and ethnicity. Subjects completed a baseline survey of demographics, socioeconomic status, comorbidity, and prostate and general HRQOL. Also, 210 cases (71.7%) and 421 controls (67.8%) completed a follow‐up survey 5 years later. Multinomial logistic regression models compared baseline characteristics as well as 5‐year general HRQOL outcomes measured by selected domains of the Medical Outcomes Study SF‐36. The authors used a mixed‐model repeated‐measures analysis of variance and multinomial regression analyses to compare longitudinal changes in urinary, bowel, and sexual function between groups. RESULTS At baseline, patients with prostate carcinoma had better urinary control and sexual function than controls. Over 5 years, sexual function declined significantly among controls, although urinary function remained stable. However, patients with cancer subsequently reported significant declines in both domains and were left with much worse function and more bother than controls. Bowel function and general HRQOL were similar for both groups at follow‐up. CONCLUSIONS Prostate carcinoma treatment led to significant 5‐year declines in urinary and sexual function that far exceeded age‐related changes in controls. Patients with cancer had significantly worse function and more bother than controls for these disease‐specific domains of HRQOL. Bowel function and general HRQOL were not affected by cancer status. Cancer 2004. Published 2004 American Cancer Society.

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