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
Rok vydání: 2020
Předmět:
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