Psychological and Psychosocial Effects of Cancer on Young Patients and Survivors in Italy: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Challenges and Meaning-Making Factors
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
2.1. Study Design
2.2. Participants
2.3. Outcome Measures
2.3.1. Measures for Objective 1
2.3.2. Measures for Objective 2
2.4. Data Analysis Techniques
2.4.1. Quantitative Analysis
2.4.2. Qualitative Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Quantitative Results
3.1.1. Descriptive Results
3.1.2. Correlations
3.2. Qualitative Results
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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| Characteristics | Minors | Caregivers | Young Adult Survivors | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| (n = 52) | (n = 52) | (n = 18) | ||
| n (%) or mean (SD) | n (%) or mean (SD) | n (%) or mean (SD) | ||
| Origin | ||||
| Anvolt association | / | / | 18 (100%) | |
| Pediatric Unit of hospital in Bari | 28 (54%) | 28 (54%) | / | |
| Pediatric hospital in Torino | 24 (46%) | 24 (46%) | / | |
| Age | 13.4 (3.82) | 44.1 (5.98) | 22.2 (2.62) | |
| Gender | ||||
| Female | 19 (36%) | 39 (75%) | 10 (56%) | |
| Man | 33 (64%) | 13 (25%) | 8 (44%) | |
| Educational level | ||||
| Low | / | 16 (31%) | 0 (0%) | |
| Secondary school or above | / | 35 (67%) | 18 (100%) | |
| Missing | / | 1 (2%) |
| Participant | Quotation Content | Iteration 1 | Iteration 2 |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | I don’t know how I can evaluate it. There’s been a lot of change. | She does not know how to evaluate it, but reports that “there has been a lot of change”. | Implicit and non-verbalizable transformation |
| 2 | After the illness, I looked for different kinds of connections. | He sought different kinds of social connections after the illness | Emergence of new relational needs |
| 3 | Sometimes I even say that, in a way, it was a positive experience for me, because now I’m able to understand many things about how the world works. It helps you realize what really matters in life | She reports a deeper understanding of how the world works | Perceived acquisition of existential insight |
| 10 | At the beginning, the illness limited me a lot. I was very young—I was in the first year of middle school. So, finding myself suddenly thrown into all of this was difficult. I was already having trouble with my class, because I was often the one who got bullied the most—for my slightly crossed eye, for being a bit more overweight, for being shorter than the others | Early bullying due to physical changes caused by the illness | The embodied weight of being seen through illness |
| 11 | I realize that maybe I’m much more mature than other people—I grew up faster | Growth and maturation ahead of peers | The lived experience of growing older inside before one’s time |
| Measure | ||
|---|---|---|
| Category/Subscale | N Percentage (%) | |
| CDI-II | Medium or Low | 82.7 |
| Total score | Average | 7.7 |
| High | 7.7 | |
| Very High | 1.9 | |
| Medium or Low | 86.5 | |
| Emotional Problems | Above Average | 11.5 |
| High | 1.9 | |
| Medium or Low | 71.2 | |
| Above Average | 13.5 | |
| Functional Problems | High | 7.7 |
| Very High | 7.7 | |
| Absent or very mild | 63.2 | |
| Absent or very mild | 68.4 | |
| DSM-5 | Absent or very mild | >89 |
| Somatic Symptoms | Absent or very mild | 63.2 |
| Absent or very mild | 60–70 | |
| Absent | 89.5 | |
| Absent | 52.6 | |
| Sleep Disturbances | Severe | 5.3 |
| Absent or sporadic | 86.8 | |
| Mild | 2.6 | |
| Moderate | 10.5 | |
| Attention Difficulties | Normal range | 68.6 |
| Threshold for anxiety disorder | 31.4 | |
| Anxiety, Somatic, Sleep, Inattention, Depression | Absent or mild in the majority of cases | |
| Irritability, Mania, Psychosis, Repetitive Behaviors, Substance Use, Suicidal Ideation | Infrequent | |
| Depressive Symptoms | Absent or sporadic | 72.1 |
| Depressive Symptoms (Medium or Low) | 73.5 | |
| Functional Problems (Medium or Low) | 81.6 | |
| Emotional Problems (Medium or Low) | <50 | |
| Measure | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| BDI-II | Category/Subscale | N Percentage (%) | Mean Score(M) |
| Total score | Mild depressive symptoms | 72.2 | – |
| Total score level | Moderate depressive symptoms | 22.2 | – |
| Severe depression | 5.6 | – | |
| Physical Health | – | 73.81 | |
| Environment | – | 69.25 | |
| WHOQOL-BREF | Social Relationships | – | 64.81 |
| Physical Health | Psychological well-being | – | 62.50 |
| Environment | Overall quality of life | – | 66.67 |
| Social Relationships | Satisfaction with own health | – | 63.89 |
| Themes | Subthemes | Example Quote |
|---|---|---|
| Suffering as an Epistemic Experience | Radical transcendence of life priorities | It makes you aware of your own life, the meaning of small things, relationships, the luck of having friends, family, and so on |
| Knowledge That Separates from the Other | Other people worry about things that I think are not a big deal | |
| Two-Timed Healing: The Discrepancy Between Bodily Recovery and Self-Integration | Euphoric phase at Treatment Completion | During the first year, I think I was caught in this bubble of excitement, the thrill of being able to do everything again. But I was setting aside many other things |
| Occupying a liminal emotional space | I felt like I had one foot on each side | |
| Between Vulnerability and Enforced Becoming | Psychocorporeal Vulnerability and Identity Challenges after Treatment Completion | When I finished treatment, I started losing weight that eventually led to an eating disorder |
| Early evolutionary stages | The first thing you do is get a stable job maybe not start a family right away, but at least, yes, secure a very stable future earlier than most people probably do |
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Gentile, M.; Ronconi, L.; Romeo, M.; De Vincenzo, C.; Burattini, E.; Rutigliano, C.; Santoro, N.; Zucchetti, G.; Fagioli, F.; Testoni, I. Psychological and Psychosocial Effects of Cancer on Young Patients and Survivors in Italy: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Challenges and Meaning-Making Factors. Diseases 2025, 13, 367. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases13110367
Gentile M, Ronconi L, Romeo M, De Vincenzo C, Burattini E, Rutigliano C, Santoro N, Zucchetti G, Fagioli F, Testoni I. Psychological and Psychosocial Effects of Cancer on Young Patients and Survivors in Italy: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Challenges and Meaning-Making Factors. Diseases. 2025; 13(11):367. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases13110367
Chicago/Turabian StyleGentile, Martina, Lucia Ronconi, Marco Romeo, Ciro De Vincenzo, Elena Burattini, Chiara Rutigliano, Nicola Santoro, Giulia Zucchetti, Franca Fagioli, and Ines Testoni. 2025. "Psychological and Psychosocial Effects of Cancer on Young Patients and Survivors in Italy: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Challenges and Meaning-Making Factors" Diseases 13, no. 11: 367. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases13110367
APA StyleGentile, M., Ronconi, L., Romeo, M., De Vincenzo, C., Burattini, E., Rutigliano, C., Santoro, N., Zucchetti, G., Fagioli, F., & Testoni, I. (2025). Psychological and Psychosocial Effects of Cancer on Young Patients and Survivors in Italy: A Mixed-Methods Study on the Challenges and Meaning-Making Factors. Diseases, 13(11), 367. https://doi.org/10.3390/diseases13110367

