Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients

Aims and Methods The overall aim was to evaluate methods of screening and assessment of distress, anxiety, and depression in cancer patients. Further, to evaluate effects of a psychosocial intervention and to explore changes of distress, anxiety, depression, and HRQoL during six months. Study I incl...

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Main Author: Thalén-Lindström, Annika
Format: Doctoral Thesis
Language:English
Published: Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för radiologi, onkologi och strålningsvetenskap 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-221956
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8965-6
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spelling ndltd-UPSALLA1-oai-DiVA.org-uu-2219562014-07-01T05:19:10ZScreening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer PatientsengThalén-Lindström, AnnikaUppsala universitet, Institutionen för radiologi, onkologi och strålningsvetenskapUppsala2014Screening and assessmentanxietydepressionpsychosocial interventionhealth-related quality of lifehospital anxiety and depression scaledistress thermometercancerAims and Methods The overall aim was to evaluate methods of screening and assessment of distress, anxiety, and depression in cancer patients. Further, to evaluate effects of a psychosocial intervention and to explore changes of distress, anxiety, depression, and HRQoL during six months. Study I included 495 consecutive patients screened with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) at their first visit to an Oncology Department. Half of the patients with >7 on any of HADS subscales received standard care (SCG), and half received a psychosocial intervention (IG). To compare HADS with a thorough clinical assessment (CA), Study II included 171 identified patients representing both sexes, <65/≥65 years, and curative/palliative treatment intention. Results Screening with HADS identified anxiety or/and depression symptoms in 36% of the 495 patients. Thirty-six (43%) of 84 IG patients attended CA, resulting in support for 20 (24%) of them. There were no differences between SC and IG during follow-up, anxiety and depression decreased and HRQoL increased, although anxiety was still present and HRQoL impaired at six months. The Distress Thermometer (DT) ≥4 (sensitivity 87%, specificity 73%) is valid for screening of distress; its ability to measure changes over time is comparable to HADS. Of 319 patients screened with <8 on both HADS subscales, 196 (80%) were stable non-cases with HRQoL comparable to that of the general population and 49 (20%) patients were unstable non-cases, with deteriorated anxiety, depression, and HRQoL. >4 on HADS subscales may be useful for early detection of unstable non-cases. In Study II, HADS identified 49 (34%) and the CA 71 (49%) patients as having distress, anxiety or depression. CA identified more men and more young patients with distress than HADS did. Conclusion Screening and assessment identifies patients with persistent symptoms and increases access to CA and support. The DT may be used routinely in oncology care. When HADS is used, healthcare professionals should be aware of psychosocial problems perceived by patients but not covered by HADS. Most patients identified with distress seem to have resources to manage problems without needing additional support. Patients screened as non-cases indicate no need for re-assessment. Doctoral thesis, comprehensive summaryinfo:eu-repo/semantics/doctoralThesistexthttp://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-221956urn:isbn:978-91-554-8965-6Digital Comprehensive Summaries of Uppsala Dissertations from the Faculty of Medicine, 1651-6206 ; 1006application/pdfinfo:eu-repo/semantics/openAccess
collection NDLTD
language English
format Doctoral Thesis
sources NDLTD
topic Screening and assessment
anxiety
depression
psychosocial intervention
health-related quality of life
hospital anxiety and depression scale
distress thermometer
cancer
spellingShingle Screening and assessment
anxiety
depression
psychosocial intervention
health-related quality of life
hospital anxiety and depression scale
distress thermometer
cancer
Thalén-Lindström, Annika
Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
description Aims and Methods The overall aim was to evaluate methods of screening and assessment of distress, anxiety, and depression in cancer patients. Further, to evaluate effects of a psychosocial intervention and to explore changes of distress, anxiety, depression, and HRQoL during six months. Study I included 495 consecutive patients screened with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) at their first visit to an Oncology Department. Half of the patients with >7 on any of HADS subscales received standard care (SCG), and half received a psychosocial intervention (IG). To compare HADS with a thorough clinical assessment (CA), Study II included 171 identified patients representing both sexes, <65/≥65 years, and curative/palliative treatment intention. Results Screening with HADS identified anxiety or/and depression symptoms in 36% of the 495 patients. Thirty-six (43%) of 84 IG patients attended CA, resulting in support for 20 (24%) of them. There were no differences between SC and IG during follow-up, anxiety and depression decreased and HRQoL increased, although anxiety was still present and HRQoL impaired at six months. The Distress Thermometer (DT) ≥4 (sensitivity 87%, specificity 73%) is valid for screening of distress; its ability to measure changes over time is comparable to HADS. Of 319 patients screened with <8 on both HADS subscales, 196 (80%) were stable non-cases with HRQoL comparable to that of the general population and 49 (20%) patients were unstable non-cases, with deteriorated anxiety, depression, and HRQoL. >4 on HADS subscales may be useful for early detection of unstable non-cases. In Study II, HADS identified 49 (34%) and the CA 71 (49%) patients as having distress, anxiety or depression. CA identified more men and more young patients with distress than HADS did. Conclusion Screening and assessment identifies patients with persistent symptoms and increases access to CA and support. The DT may be used routinely in oncology care. When HADS is used, healthcare professionals should be aware of psychosocial problems perceived by patients but not covered by HADS. Most patients identified with distress seem to have resources to manage problems without needing additional support. Patients screened as non-cases indicate no need for re-assessment.
author Thalén-Lindström, Annika
author_facet Thalén-Lindström, Annika
author_sort Thalén-Lindström, Annika
title Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
title_short Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
title_full Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
title_fullStr Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
title_full_unstemmed Screening and Assessment of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Cancer Patients
title_sort screening and assessment of distress, anxiety, and depression in cancer patients
publisher Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för radiologi, onkologi och strålningsvetenskap
publishDate 2014
url http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-221956
http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:isbn:978-91-554-8965-6
work_keys_str_mv AT thalenlindstromannika screeningandassessmentofdistressanxietyanddepressionincancerpatients
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