Abstract

PurposeDetermine whether a diverse set of problems experienced by breast cancer survivors (BCS) following curative treatment can be formulated into a reduced number of clusters, potentially simplifying the conceptualization of these problems.MethodFemale BCS were recruited from four cancer hospitals in China. The Chinese translation of the Cancer Survivor Profile (CSPro) was used to measure 18 common problem areas, as supported by epidemiological and phenomenological research. The Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy–Breast (FACT-B) was used to measure quality of life, as a validation of any observed groupings. Hierarchical clustering using multiple distance criteria and aggregation methods to detect patterns of problems was used.ResultsA total of 1008 BCS (mean 46.51 years old) living in both urban and rural areas were investigated. Hierarchical cluster analysis identified two major clusters of problems. One set was classified as “functional limitations,” while the other cluster was labeled “multi-problems.” Those who fell into the multi-problem cluster experienced poorer quality of life.ConclusionEighteen non-medical problems were broken down into two major clusters: (1) limitations in higher level functions required of daily life and (2) limitations in health care–seeking skills, problems with certain symptoms, unhealthy behaviors, and financial problems related to cancer. The breakdown of problem areas into these two clusters may help identify common mechanisms.Implications for Cancer SurvivorsIn the future, the search for common clusters and the mechanisms for the many problems that breast cancer survivors and other cancer survivors can experience following primary treatment may improve how we help manage these problems in the future.

Highlights

  • Over the past two decades, many patient-reported assessment tools have been developed to identify common problems experienced in cancer survivors following curative treatment [1,2,3]

  • The Cancer Survivor Profile (CSPro) was developed to detect a multidimensional range of symptoms, function-related challenges, lifestyle behaviors, financial strain, and difficulty with skills helpful in obtaining quality health care for in breast cancer survivors (BCS) following primary oncology treatment and beyond

  • Hierarchical cluster analysis indicated that the broad array of problem areas that can be experienced by BCS fell into two clusters: (1) cases that report higher levels of functional limitations and (2) cases with multiple elevated problem areas, or a pattern characterized by lower levels of health-seeking skills, higher symptom burden, unhealthy lifestyle factors, and financial strain

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past two decades, many patient-reported assessment tools have been developed to identify common problems experienced in cancer survivors following curative treatment [1,2,3]. These approaches have allowed for improved identification and development of corresponding interventions across many different problem areas [2, 3]. One such patient-reported tool is the Cancer Survivor Profile (CSPro) [4]. The CSPro has been translated into Chinese and this version has been rigorously validated [6]

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