Abstract
The impact of cancer prehabilitation on psychological outcomes and quality of life in patients with gastro-oesophageal cancer.
Author
person
Laura Halliday
Imperial College, London, London, United Kingdom
info_outline
Laura Halliday, Krishna Moorthy, Alex King, Venetia Wynter-Blyth, Bernarda Zamora Zamora Talaya
Full text
Authors
person
Laura Halliday
Imperial College, London, London, United Kingdom
info_outline
Laura Halliday, Krishna Moorthy, Alex King, Venetia Wynter-Blyth, Bernarda Zamora Zamora Talaya
Organizations
Imperial College, London, London, United Kingdom, Imperial College Healthcare NHS trust, London, United Kingdom
Abstract Disclosures
Research Funding
No funding received
None.
Background:
The impact of cancer on psychological health and health related quality of life (HRQoL) is complex and involves an interaction between pre-existing and cancer related psychological morbidity and symptoms. Factors such as self-efficacy are known predictors of recovery and HRQoL. The aim of this study is to assess the impact of multi-modal personalised prehabilitation on psychological outcomes and HRQoL in patients with curable oesophageal and gastric (OG) cancer.
Methods:
Data was collected for to all patients treated at a specialist centre between Jan 2016 and June 2018. Patients received multi-modal (physical, nutrition and psychological) prehabilitation from diagnosis into the post-operative period. Data on self-efficacy (SE), anxiety and depression (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, HADS) and HRQoL (European Organization for Research and treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (EORTC QLQ-C30)) were collected at diagnosis (T1), completion of neo-adjuvant chemotherapy (T2) and 3 months after surgery (T3). A previously validated mapping function was used for predicting Euro QoL 5D-3L (EQ-5D-3L) from scale scores of the EORTC QLQ-C30 instrument to derive a EQ health utility (EQ-HU).
Results:
137 patients underwent surgery. 86 patients underwent a thoracotomy in addition to a laparotomy. 107 patients received neo-adjuvant treatment. There was a significant improvement in SE [8.2 (6.2-9) to 8.8 (7.8-9.7); p = 0.002] and anxiety [5 (3-8) to 4 (2,7); p = 0.04] but not depression [2 (1-5) to 3 (1-5); p = 0.26] between T1 and T2. There were no differences between T2 and T3. There were no differences in global HRQoL and the individual scales of the EORTC QLQ-C30 between T1 and T2. However, between T2 and T3, there were significant reductions in global HRQoL [69.6 (18.2) to 64.7 (20.9); p = 0.04], physical [83.2 (18.2) to 70.9 (20.5); p = 0.001], role [79 (28.6) to 70.9 (28.3; p = 0.02], cognitive [84.2 (22.3) to 76 (23.3); p = 0.004] and social [79 (24.2) to 65.5 (26.1); p = 0.001] but not emotional functions [80.1 (21.4) to 79.5 (23.3); p = 0.67]. Mapping revealed that there was a significant improvement in EQ-HU from T1 to T2 [0.54 (0.52) to 0.79 (0.34); p = 0.001] and a significant fall from T2 to T3 [ 0.79 (0.34) to 0.58 (0.44); p = 0.001]. The minimum and maximum predicted values matched those of the validated mapping function used.
Conclusions:
This study shows that prehabilitation can have a significant impact on HU in patients on chemotherapy. Despite the well-recognised limitations of mapping, HU at baseline was comparable to that shown in previous research in OG cancer patients. Reduction in HRQoL seen after surgery was much less than previously published research, suggesting the protective effect of prehabilitation. Physical function deterioration, in particular was much less than anticipated.
3 organizations
10 drugs
11 targets
Organization
Imperial CollegeOrganization
London Regional Cancer CenterOrganization
Imperial College Healthcare NHS TrustDrug
CisplatinDrug
5-FUDrug
carboplatinDrug
TiragolumabDrug
docetaxelDrug
FF-10832Drug
methotrexateDrug
mFOLFOXIRIDrug
mFOLFOX6Drug
etoposideTarget
thymidylate synthaseTarget
BCL-2Target
DNA topoisomerase IITarget
DNA synthesisTarget
Transcription factorsTarget
DNA repair enzymesTarget
Bcl-xLTarget
DNATarget
IrinotecanTarget
taxol