Abstract

Objective This study investigated the fear of progression (FoP) in cancer patients and the discriminant ability of the Fear of Progression Questionnaire (FoP-Q) against the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS), while also examining relationships between FoP, satisfaction outcomes and supportive needs. Method The FoP-Q and HADS were administered to 112 cancer patients in Korea during June and July 2006. The FoP-Q totals and subscales, and the HADS scores were compared across three groups (patients with recurrence, patients with metastases and controls experiencing neither). Results Comparison of the FoP-Q total score to HADS anxiety (HADS-A) and depression (HADS-D) scores showed higher FoP in the recurrence group compared to the control group ( P=.009). Subscale score comparisons revealed a heightened “affective reaction” ( P=.003) to cancer progression and fear of “loss of autonomy” ( P=.011) in recurrence patients. FoP-Q score showed a moderate association with HADS-A ( r=.54, P=.000) and a significant association with treatment satisfaction ( r=−.26, P=.007), medical staff and communication ( r=−.31, P=.001), and supportive needs ( r=.41, P=.000). Conclusion The importance of providing supportive interventions tailored to the specific emotional concerns of cancer patients, assessed via appropriate, disease-specific instruments, and the need to pay special attention to the concerns of recurrence patients are suggested.

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