Cancer
Burden Seen Even Many Years
After
Diagnosis
Behind the Cancer Headlines®
Compared with people who have never been diagnosed with
cancer, cancer survivors experience lower quality of life, more lost
productivity, and more health limitations, even among those who
have survived more than 10 years after diagnosis, according to a new
study published in the Journal of the National Cancer Institute.
In the
To better estimate the burden of surviving cancer, Robin Yabroff, Ph.D., of the National Cancer Institute, and colleagues from NCI and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality analyzed data collected in the 2000 National Health Interview Survey, an annual survey that asks respondents questions about their lives and health. The researchers analyzed responses from more than 1,800 cancer survivors and nearly 5,500 control subjects who were matched for age, sex, and level of education.
Cancer survivors had a lower quality of life, more lost productivity, and more health limitations than the control subjects, and this high level of burden was seen even beyond 10 years after their diagnosis. While these differences existed across all tumor sites, survivors of cancers that typically have shorter survival times, such as lung cancer, reported a greater level of burden from their disease compared with survivors of breast, colorectal, prostate, and other cancers. The authors suggest that this difference may reflect a greater proportion of people with cancers that typically have shorter survival times being more likely to have metastatic or, at least, active cancer.
SOURCE;
Journal of the National
Cancer Institute,