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Trials / Completed

CompletedNCT05122052

Effect of Gender on Distress and Fatigue in Cancer Patients

Effect of Gender on Distress and Fatigue Over Time in Cancer Patients. A Prospective Longitudinal Study.

Status
Completed
Phase
Study type
Observational
Enrollment
500 (actual)
Sponsor
Ente Ospedaliero Ospedali Galliera · Academic / Other
Sex
All
Age
Healthy volunteers
Not accepted

Summary

Distress in cancer patients has been shown to be higher in females than males, but the behavior of distress during time in longitudinal prospective studies has not been studied, nor is it known if there are differences related to gender during time. These differences may have important therapeutic implications in terms of selective psychological support as cancer progresses during individual trajectories. The aim of the present study is to examine the effect of gender during time on psychological distress and fatigue in cancer patients across a broad range of cancer types. It is hypothesized that women will report higher psychological distress than men at initial visit but a reversed trend will be observed during follow-up as a result of different coping capabilities between men and women. We will also investigate if psychological factors (distress, anxiety and depression) affected antibody response and markers of COVID-19 vaccine activation (C-reactive protein, CRP and D-dimer) after 6 months from initial vaccination. Caregivers will also be interviewed to measure their burden with the Zarit Burden Interview. Patients attending a cancer outpatient clinic are invited to undergo a psychological session immediately before the medical visit. Distress is assessed by the Distress thermometer and fatigue by the ESAS-r scale at the end of the session. Patients will undergo follow-up visits to assess changes during time and possible time by gender interactions.

Detailed description

Distress and fatigue in cancer patients are important factors affecting treatment compliance and efficacy and quality of life. The prevalence of moderate or severe emotional distress in cancer patients ranges from 30 to 45% depending on a point of assessment. The National Comprehensive Cancer Network indicates that all cancer patients should undergo a distress measurement as the sixth vital parameter to prevent more serious psychological disorders, including anxiety, depression and coping disturbances. Several studies indicate that patients undergoing psychotherapy or psychosocial support to relieve cancer distress have better disease coping, a reduction of fatigue, anxiety and depression and an improvement in quality of live and possibly survival. Distress in cancer patients has been shown to be higher in females than males, but the behavior of distress during time in longitudinal prospective studies has not been studied, nor is it known if there are differences related to gender during time. These differences may have important therapeutic implications in terms of selective psychological support as cancer progresses during individual trajectories. The aim of the present study is to examine the effect of gender during time on psychological distress and fatigue in cancer patients across a broad range of cancer types. It is hypothesized that women will report higher psychological distress than men at initial visit but a reversed trend will be observed during follow-up as a result of different coping capabilities between men and women. In a subset of patients, we will also investigate if psychological factors (distress, anxiety and depression) affected antibody response and markers of COVID-19 vaccine activation (C-reactive protein, CRP and D-dimer) after 6 months from initial vaccination. Caregivers will also be interviewed with the Zarit questionnaire, a popular caregiver self-report measure used by many aging agencies, originated as a 29-item questionnaire The 29-item instrument is included in Zarit et al., 1980. Each item on the interview is a statement which the caregiver is asked to endorse using a 5-point scale. Response options range from 0 (Never) to 4 (Nearly Always). Patients attending a cancer outpatient clinic are invited to undergo a psychological session immediately before the medical visit. Distress is assessed by the Distress thermometer and fatigue by the ESAS-r scale at the end of the session. Patients will undergo follow-up visits to assess changes during time and possible time by gender interactions.

Conditions

Interventions

TypeNameDescription
OTHERPsychological sessionJust before the oncology visit, each patient is invited to undergo a psychological session of 20-30 minutes. During the session with a psycho-oncologist the following tasks are addressed: 1) favor emotional expression identifying the most difficult issues to promote mechanisms of elaboration of living experiences; 2) offer a containment of intense emotions; 3) assess awareness of diagnosis and prognosis; 4) favor expression of fears of treatment expectancy; 5) favor expression of difficulties on the inability to cope with prior commitments after the disease; 6) assess family and friend network; 7) improve the patient medic communication and relationship. At the end of the session, the distress thermometer and ESAS-r scale are compiled together with the demographic characteristics. All outstanding issues that are relevant to the therapeutic plan are then discussed between the psychotherapist and the medic before the oncology visit together with delivery of the DT and ESASr scale result.

Timeline

Start date
2018-11-28
Primary completion
2024-09-07
Completion
2025-03-31
First posted
2021-11-16
Last updated
2025-08-08

Locations

1 site across 1 country: Italy

Source: ClinicalTrials.gov record NCT05122052. Inclusion in this directory is not an endorsement.