Abstract

Studies reporting quality of life (QOL) measures alongside conventional measures of effectiveness of interventions and outcome are essential. We aimed to compare QOL and mental well-being in hepatobiliary and pancreatic cancer patients before and after receiving treatment. This was a hospital-based prospective study. The study was conducted in North India for a period of 1 year. QOL was assessed in 118 patients using the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-Hepatobiliary Scale and Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders Fifth Edition Level 1 Cross-Cutting Symptom Measure-Adult was used to assess the psychiatric domains of subjects. The data were analyzed using MS Excel and SPSS version 23. Statistical significance between QOL scores at baseline and 12 weeks was evaluated by Student's t-test. Pre- and post-Cronbach's alpha reliability coefficient was also calculated. 59.4% of subjects were females and 40.6% were males. Carcinoma gallbladder was the predominant cancer (2/3rd) followed by carcinoma pancreas (1/3rd). Both pre- and posttreatment reliability coefficients showed values ≥ 0.75, indicating that the questionnaire reliably measured different domains of health-related QOL, both on generic and disease-specific scales. Using paired t-test, a significant difference was observed only in the physical (P = 0.001) and functional (P = 0.0002) domains. There was a slight increase in proportion of patients demonstrating improvement in severity of depression and anxiety at 6-12 weeks and the number of patients experiencing moderate symptoms of sleep disorders and somatic disorders. The number of patients experiencing severe symptoms of anger decreased posttreatment. QOL is amenable to improvement with timely interventions including counseling.

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