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Trajectories of Fear of Progression in Nasopharyngeal Carcinoma Patients Receiving Proton and Heavy Ion Therapy

Overview
Specialties Critical Care
Oncology
Date 2023 Oct 16
PMID 37843679
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Abstract

Objective: The study examined the growth trajectory of fear of progression(FOP) in nasopharyngeal carcinoma (NPC) patients. In addition, sociodemographic and clinical variables of each trajectory class were analyzed.

Method: Two hundred sixteen NPC patients undergoing proton and heavy ion therapy were measured beginning (T0) and end of a 4-week proton and heavy ion therapy (T1), 3 months (T2) and 6 months (T3) after discharge. And data from the final 197 NPC patients were analyzed. NPC patients' FOP was investigated by the Fear of Progression Questionnaire-Short Form (FOP-Q-SF) form T0 to T3. SPSS and Mplus were used for statistical analysis. The LGMM was used to analyze the trajectory of FOP followed up over 6 months after proton and heavy ion therapy. The logistic regression was utilized to compare the differences in sociodemographic and clinical characteristics of patients in different trajectory groups of FOP.

Results: One hundred ninety-seven NPC patients were analyzed. LGMM analysis showed that three-group trajectory solution was the best fitting (low-fear decline FOP (14.21%), the moderate-fear stable FOP(43.15%), and high-fear rising FOP (42.64%). Significant positive associations were found between age < 30 years (β = 3.399, p = 0.023), with or without children (β = 3.1, p = 0.002), primary/recurrence (β = -6.196, p < 0.001), diagnosis < 3 months (β = 4.435, p = 0.031), high school education (β = 2.98, p = 0.048), and high fear rising FOP. Patients who had moderate financial stress (β = 2.51, p = 0.041), with or without children (β = 1.564, p = 0.003), primary/recurrence (β = -2.578, p = 0.005), less than 30 radiotherapy times (β = 0.979, p = 0.046) tended to report significant moderate-fear stable FOP over time.

Conclusion: 42.64% of the NPC patients showed high-fear rising FOP over the 6 months after treatment. Age 18-30 years, with or without children, relapsed, diagnosis < 3 months, and high school education and reporting being a pessimist predicts higher FOP scores. Early identification of age 18-30 years, with or without children, relapsed, diagnosis < 3 months, and high school education might help to identify populations experiencing long-term FOP. Clinical teams responsible to develop the target interventions for management of FCR in clinical practice.

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