|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
abstract
Purpose
The assessment of
quality of life (QOL) among ovarian cancer (OC) patients has mainly
focused on the acute phase of treatment. This systematic review examines
studies measuring QOL in patients who survived OC after treatment and
synthesizes results in order to assess QOL and patient-reported outcome
(PRO) data at long-term follow-up.
Methods
Articles published
in English between 1990 to November 2014 were identified with the
databases MEDLINE and PubMed, using the specific keywords “OC survivors”
combined with the terms, “QOL,” “health-related QOL,” and “PROs.” Data
were reviewed for design, time since end of treatment, measurement
tools, and outcomes (categorized in three topics: global QOL compared to
controls, treatment sequelae, and intervention strategies).
Results
The initial search
strategy provided 148 articles of which 31 were considered eligible.
Most studies focused on epithelial OC, and only a few studies
investigated survivors of ovarian germ cell tumor. More than 60
instruments of QOL measures were used in the corpus. Despite the
persistence of psychological and physical symptoms, treatment sequelae,
sexual problems, and fear of recurrence in some survivors, most studies
demonstrated that OC survivors generally have good QOL compared to
healthy women. Studies proposing interventions are lacking.
Conclusions and Implications for Cancer Survivor
OC survivors
experience a wide range of sequelae that may persist for a long time and
negatively impact QOL. Further large-scale research is needed to fully
understand problems that have significant effects on QOL, in order to
develop interventions and treatments suitable for women at need.
0 comments :
Post a Comment
Your comments?
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.