What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Population and Sample
2.2. Patient Interview
2.3. Data Synthesis and Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Patient Characteristics
3.2. Open-Ended Questions
3.3. Selecting Top FIVE Priorities
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A
Name of the Category | Order in Which They Are Asked in the Predefined List |
---|---|
Independence of ADLs ** | 1 |
Cognition | 2 |
Religion | 3 |
Well-being | 4 |
Staying in your own home | 5 |
Independence of iADLs ** | 6 |
Contact with family | 7 |
Contact with the community | 8 |
Leisure activities | 9 |
Good life (Life satisfaction) | 10 |
Helping others | 11 |
Having enough energy | 12 |
Health | 13 |
No worry about others * | |
Finances * |
Appendix B
Categories | Open Question Worthwhile (% of Participants, N = 63) | Open Question Definition QoL (% of Participants, N = 63) | Top 5 Priority (% of Participants, N = 60) |
---|---|---|---|
N (%) | N (%) | N (%) | |
Family | 53 (84%) | 44 (70%) | 42 (67%) |
Leisure | 47 (75%) | 31 (49%) | 8 (11%) |
Independence ± | 19 (30%) | 30 (48%) | 34 (54%) |
Health * | 18 (29%) | 27 (43%) | 16 (25%) |
Community | 30 (48%) | 15 (24%) | 24 (38%) |
Well-being | 9 (14%) | 13 (21%) | 13 (19%) |
Cognition | 3 (5%) | 11 (17%) | 43 (68%) |
Partner ** | 28 (44%) | 7 (11%) | |
Helping | 9 (14%) | 7 (11%) | 21 (32%) |
Having enough energy | 11 (17%) | 6 (10%) | 17 (25%) |
Religion | 4 (6%) | 4 (6%) | 10 (16%) |
Good life | 7 (11%) | 4 (6%) | 15 (22%) |
Finances ** | 4 (6%) | 3 (5%) | |
Home | 1 (2%) | 2 (3%) | 29 (43%) |
Worries about others ** | 7 (11%) | 0 |
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Domain | Name of the Category | Definition of the Category |
---|---|---|
Physical health | Energy | Have enough energy and good physical condition |
Health | No physical complaints, no problems of the disease or treatment bothering you, maintaining good health, control of the disease, have no other disease, etc. | |
Psychological and cognitive functioning | Cognition | Have no trouble thinking, remembering or concentrating |
Well-being | Emotional well-being, not being anxious, not being depressed, no excessive worrying, calmness of mind | |
Not worry about others | Prosperity of your friends and family, so you don’t have to worry about them | |
Physical functioning | Independence | Being independent, freedom to go where you want, no need for help from other people, good mobility, etc. |
Leisure activities | Being able to perform the activities that you want, that give you joy and satisfaction, e.g., hobbies, holiday, nature, food. | |
Staying in your own home | Being able to live in your own home and not move to a nursing home | |
Social functioning | Partner | Being together with a partner or having the comforting memories of a good marriage or relationship |
Family (including partner) | The support or presence of other family | |
Community | Support from friends, acquaintances, and other people from the community | |
Helping others | Being able to help others | |
Meaningful life | Religion | Support of your religion |
Good life | The satisfaction of your life being important, looking back on a good life | |
Other | Finances | Having enough money without having to worry too much |
Characteristics | n (%) |
---|---|
Sex | |
Male | 30 (48%) |
Female | 33 (52%) |
Age median (range) | 76 years (70–92) |
Partner status | |
Widow(er) | 16 (25%) |
Current partner | 43 (68%) |
Impaired in basic activities of daily living | 15 (24%) |
Impaired in instrumental activities of daily living | 21 (33%) |
No walking aid | 43 (68%) |
Charlson Comorbidity Index (in addition to cancer) | 1 (0–6) |
Education | |
University or higher education | 29 (46%) |
Vocational training | 11 (17%) |
Primary/secondary education or less | 8 (13%) |
Missing | 15 (24%) |
Types of cancer | |
Breast cancer | 16 (25%) |
Multiple myeloma | 10 (16%) |
Prostate cancer | 9 (14%) |
Chronic Lymphocytic | 4 (6%) |
Chronic lymphocytic leukaemia | |
Lymphoma (various types) | 7 (11%) |
Ovarian cancer | 3 (5%) |
Colorectal cancer | 9 (14%) |
Other gastrointestinal tumours | 5 (8%) |
Disease stage | |
Stage I | 9 (14%) |
Stage II | 4 (6%) |
Stage III | 9 (14%) |
Stage IV | 27 (43%) |
Other (hematologic) | 14 (22%) |
Received treatment (multiple options per patient possible) | |
Chemotherapy | 42 (67%) |
Surgery | 26 (41%) |
Targeted therapy | 21 (33%) |
Immunotherapy | 18 (29%) |
Hormone therapy | 18 (29%) |
Radiation therapy | 17 (27%) |
Corticosteroids | 17 (27%) |
Categories | Open-Ended Questions (n = 63) | Predefined Options (n = 60) | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|
Cognition | 11 (17%) | 43 (72%) | <0.001 |
Family (including partner) | 16 (27%) | 42 (70%) | <0.001 |
Independence | 30 (48%) | 34 (57%) | 0.32 |
Staying in your own home | 2 (3%) | 29 (48%) | <0.001 |
Community | 15 (24%) | 24 (40%) | 0.05 |
Helping others | 7 (11%) | 21 (35%) | 0.002 |
Energy | 6 (10%) | 17 (28%) | 0.01 |
Health | 27 (43%) | 16 (27%) | 0.06 |
Good life | 4 (6%) | 15 (25%) | 0.004 |
Well-being | 13 (21%) | 13 (22%) | 0.89 |
Religion | 4 (6%) | 10 (17%) | 0.07 |
Leisure activities | 31 (49%) | 8 (13%) | <0.001 |
Financial worries | 3 (5%) | ** | x |
Categories | Male (n = 30) | Female (n = 33) | p-Value |
---|---|---|---|
Cognition | 23 (77%) | 20 (61%) | 0.17 |
Family (including partner) | 21 (70%) | 21 (64%) | 0.59 |
Independence | 15 (48%) | 20 (59%) | 0.40 |
Staying in your own home | 11 (37%) | 18 (55%) | 0.16 |
Community | 14 (47%) | 10 (30%) | 0.18 |
Helping others | 9 (30%) | 12 (36%) | 0.59 |
Energy | 7 (23%) | 10 (30%) | 0.53 |
Health | 7 (23%) | 9 (27%) | 0.72 |
Good life | 6 (20%) | 9 (27%) | 0.50 |
Religion | 6 (20%) | 4 (12%) | 0.39 |
Well-being | 4 (13%) | 9 (27%) | 0.17 |
Leisure | 3 (10%) | 5 (15%) | 0.54 |
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Seghers, P.A.L.; Kregting, J.A.; van Huis-Tanja, L.H.; Soubeyran, P.; O'Hanlon, S.; Rostoft, S.; Hamaker, M.E.; Portielje, J.E.A. What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study. Cancers 2022, 14, 1123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123
Seghers PAL, Kregting JA, van Huis-Tanja LH, Soubeyran P, O'Hanlon S, Rostoft S, Hamaker ME, Portielje JEA. What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study. Cancers. 2022; 14(5):1123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123
Chicago/Turabian StyleSeghers, Petronella A. L. (Nelleke), Jolina A. Kregting, Lieke H. van Huis-Tanja, Pierre Soubeyran, Shane O'Hanlon, Siri Rostoft, Marije E. Hamaker, and Johanneke E. A. Portielje. 2022. "What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study" Cancers 14, no. 5: 1123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123
APA StyleSeghers, P. A. L., Kregting, J. A., van Huis-Tanja, L. H., Soubeyran, P., O'Hanlon, S., Rostoft, S., Hamaker, M. E., & Portielje, J. E. A. (2022). What Defines Quality of Life for Older Patients Diagnosed with Cancer? A Qualitative Study. Cancers, 14(5), 1123. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14051123