Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors

Background: Latinas experience a greater number of symptoms and are at an elevated risk for depression and anxiety following a diagnosis of breast cancer compared to Non-Hispanic Whites and African Americans. Cancer-related symptom clusters are frequently reported in women with breast cancer and res...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Crane, Tracy E.
Other Authors: Badger, Terry A.
Language:en_US
Published: The University of Arizona. 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10150/621858
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/621858
id ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-621858
record_format oai_dc
spelling ndltd-arizona.edu-oai-arizona.openrepository.com-10150-6218582017-01-05T03:00:33Z Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors Crane, Tracy E. Crane, Tracy E. Badger, Terry A. Badger, Terry A. Rosenfeld, Anne G. Reed, Pamela G. Hsu, Chiu-Hsieh Breast Cancer Depression Latinas Symptoms Nursing Nursing Anxiety Background: Latinas experience a greater number of symptoms and are at an elevated risk for depression and anxiety following a diagnosis of breast cancer compared to Non-Hispanic Whites and African Americans. Cancer-related symptom clusters are frequently reported in women with breast cancer and research suggests these women follow distinct trajectories for depression and anxiety. However, little is known about the trajectories of anxiety and depression or cancer-related symptom clusters in Latinas with breast cancer. Methods: 296 Latinas previously recruited and diagnosed with breast cancer comprised this sample. Questionnaires for depression (the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression) and Anxiety (Speilberger State-Trait Inventory and PROMIS Anxiety) were administered at baseline, 2 and 4 months post enrollment. To identify classes of Latina breast cancer survivors based on patterns of symptom occurrence, symptoms latent class analysis was used to describe symptom clusters. Group-based growth mixture modeling was utilized to identify classes of women who followed distinct trajectories of depression and anxiety. Results: On average women reported 4.2±3 symptoms with an overall symptom distress score of 6.4±2.5 (out of a scale of 10). Three symptom classes were identified: Weary and Sleepy (class 1), Weary (class 2) and Weary, Sleepy and Hurting (class 3). Women were most likely to cluster in class 1, followed by class 2 and 3 with fatigue (labeled weary) being the most prevalent symptom for all three classes. Three trajectories emerged for both depression and anxiety. For depression, the majority of women (79.6%) fell in the high then reducing trajectory for depression followed by the low and remaining low (17%) and the high and increasing (worsening) trajectories of depression (3%). For anxiety the majority (78% of women) followed the moderate to increasing (worsening) trajectory of anxiety followed by 14% in the moderate to declining (improving) and 8% in the low to slightly increasing (worsening) trajectories for anxiety. Conclusion: This study suggests Latina breast cancer survivors experience burdensome cancer-related symptom clusters and distinct trajectories for depression and anxiety. Further research is needed in minority women with breast cancer to adequately understand and treat cancer-related symptom clusters as well as depression and anxiety. 2016 text Electronic Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/10150/621858 http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/621858 en_US Copyright © is held by the author. Digital access to this material is made possible by the University Libraries, University of Arizona. Further transmission, reproduction or presentation (such as public display or performance) of protected items is prohibited except with permission of the author. The University of Arizona.
collection NDLTD
language en_US
sources NDLTD
topic Breast Cancer
Depression
Latinas
Symptoms
Nursing
Nursing
Anxiety
spellingShingle Breast Cancer
Depression
Latinas
Symptoms
Nursing
Nursing
Anxiety
Crane, Tracy E.
Crane, Tracy E.
Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
description Background: Latinas experience a greater number of symptoms and are at an elevated risk for depression and anxiety following a diagnosis of breast cancer compared to Non-Hispanic Whites and African Americans. Cancer-related symptom clusters are frequently reported in women with breast cancer and research suggests these women follow distinct trajectories for depression and anxiety. However, little is known about the trajectories of anxiety and depression or cancer-related symptom clusters in Latinas with breast cancer. Methods: 296 Latinas previously recruited and diagnosed with breast cancer comprised this sample. Questionnaires for depression (the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression) and Anxiety (Speilberger State-Trait Inventory and PROMIS Anxiety) were administered at baseline, 2 and 4 months post enrollment. To identify classes of Latina breast cancer survivors based on patterns of symptom occurrence, symptoms latent class analysis was used to describe symptom clusters. Group-based growth mixture modeling was utilized to identify classes of women who followed distinct trajectories of depression and anxiety. Results: On average women reported 4.2±3 symptoms with an overall symptom distress score of 6.4±2.5 (out of a scale of 10). Three symptom classes were identified: Weary and Sleepy (class 1), Weary (class 2) and Weary, Sleepy and Hurting (class 3). Women were most likely to cluster in class 1, followed by class 2 and 3 with fatigue (labeled weary) being the most prevalent symptom for all three classes. Three trajectories emerged for both depression and anxiety. For depression, the majority of women (79.6%) fell in the high then reducing trajectory for depression followed by the low and remaining low (17%) and the high and increasing (worsening) trajectories of depression (3%). For anxiety the majority (78% of women) followed the moderate to increasing (worsening) trajectory of anxiety followed by 14% in the moderate to declining (improving) and 8% in the low to slightly increasing (worsening) trajectories for anxiety. Conclusion: This study suggests Latina breast cancer survivors experience burdensome cancer-related symptom clusters and distinct trajectories for depression and anxiety. Further research is needed in minority women with breast cancer to adequately understand and treat cancer-related symptom clusters as well as depression and anxiety.
author2 Badger, Terry A.
author_facet Badger, Terry A.
Crane, Tracy E.
Crane, Tracy E.
author Crane, Tracy E.
Crane, Tracy E.
author_sort Crane, Tracy E.
title Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
title_short Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
title_full Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
title_fullStr Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
title_full_unstemmed Symptom Clusters and Trajectories of Depression and Anxiety in Latina Breast Cancer Survivors
title_sort symptom clusters and trajectories of depression and anxiety in latina breast cancer survivors
publisher The University of Arizona.
publishDate 2016
url http://hdl.handle.net/10150/621858
http://arizona.openrepository.com/arizona/handle/10150/621858
work_keys_str_mv AT cranetracye symptomclustersandtrajectoriesofdepressionandanxietyinlatinabreastcancersurvivors
AT cranetracye symptomclustersandtrajectoriesofdepressionandanxietyinlatinabreastcancersurvivors
_version_ 1718406759977058304