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Certain Breast Cancer Patients Worry More About Recurrence
Reported March 29, 2011
A new study has found that certain types of women with early stage breast
cancer are vulnerable to excessive worrying about cancer recurrence. In
addition, worrying about cancer recurrence can compromise patients’ medical
care and quality of life.
Thanks to recent medical advances, most women who are diagnosed with early
stage breast cancer have a low risk for cancer recurrence. Despite an
optimistic future, many of these women report that they worry that their
cancer will come back. While some worry about cancer recurrence is
understandable, for some women these worries can be so strong that they have
an impact on what treatments women choose, how often they seek care, and
their quality of life as cancer survivors.
Nancy Janz, PhD, of the University of Michigan School of Public Health in
Ann Arbor led a study that investigated whether worrying about recurrence
was related to race and ethnicity, acculturation (the process by which
members of one cultural group adopt the beliefs and behaviors of another
group), clinical and treatment factors, and how women viewed their
experience in the health care system while being treated for breast cancer.
The researchers studied 2,290 women with non-metastatic breast cancer who
were diagnosed from June 2005 to February 2007 and reported to Detroit or
Los Angeles cancer registries. A patient's level of worry was determined by
assessing her concern about cancer returning to the same breast, the other
breast, and spreading to other parts of the body.
Dr. Janz and her team found that women who had greater ease in understanding
clinical information that was presented to them, who experienced fewer
symptoms, and who received more coordinated care reported less worry about
recurrence. Less acculturated Latina breast cancer patients were
particularly vulnerable to high levels of worry, while African American
patients had significantly less worry than other races. Other factors that
were associated with more worry were being younger, being employed,
experiencing more pain and fatigue, and undergoing radiation treatment.
"How much women worry about recurrence is often not aligned with their
actual risk for cancer recurrence," Dr. Janz was quoted as saying. "We need
to better understand the factors that increase the likelihood that women
will worry and develop strategies and appropriate referrals to help women
with excessive worry.” She noted that programs to assist women must be
culturally sensitive and tailored to patients' differences in communication
style, social support, and coping strategies. She also stressed the
importance of appropriately presenting risk information to women with breast
cancer so that they can understand their risk and effectively participate in
treatment decisions.
SOURCE: CANCER, published online March 28, 2011
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