Communicative Participation and Quality of Life in Pretreatment Oral and Oropharyngeal Head and Neck Cancer
Autor: | Neal Futran, Carolyn Baylor, Tanya L. Eadie, Cara Sauder, Kathryn Yorkston, Mara Kapsner-Smith |
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Rok vydání: | 2020 |
Předmět: |
Adult
Male Oncology medicine.medical_specialty Adolescent Speech Disorders Article Young Adult 03 medical and health sciences 0302 clinical medicine Quality of life Internal medicine medicine Humans Speech In patient Prospective Studies 030223 otorhinolaryngology Head and neck Aged Voice Disorders business.industry Head and neck cancer Middle Aged medicine.disease Oropharyngeal Neoplasms Cross-Sectional Studies Otorhinolaryngology 030220 oncology & carcinogenesis Quality of Life Voice Female Mouth Neoplasms Surgery business |
Zdroj: | Otolaryngol Head Neck Surg |
ISSN: | 1097-6817 0194-5998 |
DOI: | 10.1177/0194599820950718 |
Popis: | OBJECTIVE: To determine how communicative participation is affected in patients with oral and oropharyngeal head and neck cancers (HNC) pre-treatment, and whether communication function predicts HNC-specific quality of life (QOL) before treatment, beyond known demographic, medical, psychosocial, and swallowing predictors. STUDY DESIGN: Cross-sectional study. SETTING: Tertiary care academic medical center. SUBJECTS AND METHODS: Eighty-seven patients with primary oral (40.2%) or oropharyngeal (59.8%) HNC were recruited prior to treatment. T stage, tumor site, and p16 status were extracted from medical records. Demographic and patient-reported measures were obtained. Communicative participation was measured using the Communicative Participation Item Bank (CPIB) General short form. A hierarchical regression analysis included demographic, medical, psychosocial, and functional measures of swallowing and communication as predictors; the University of Washington Quality of Life (UW-QOL v4) composite score was the predicted variable. RESULTS: Median baseline CPIB scores were 71.0 (SD = 11.83); patients with oral cancers reported worse scores. A final sequential hierarchical regression model that included all variables explained 71% of variance in QOL scores. Tumor site, T stage, and p16 status accounted for 28% of variance (P < 0.001). Perceived depression predicted an additional 28% of the variance (P < 0.001). Swallowing and communicative participation together predicted an additional 12% of variance (P = 0.005). Tumor site, perceived depression, swallowing, and communication measures were unique predictors in the final model. Finally, communicative participation uniquely predicted QOL, above and beyond other predictors. CONCLUSION: Pre-treatment communication predicted QOL, and was negatively impacted in some oral and oropharyngeal HNC patients. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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