The Psychological Distress of Cancer Patients following the COVID-19 Pandemic First Lockdown: Results from a Large French Survey
Abstract
:Simple Summary
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. Material and Methods
2.1. Participants
2.2. Assessments Tools
2.3. Statistical Analysis
3. Results
3.1. Description of the Study Population
3.2. Univariate Analyses
3.3. Factors Associated with Anxiety One Month Following COVID-19-Related Lockdown
3.4. Factors Associated with Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder One Month Following COVID-19-Related Lockdown
4. Discussion
5. Conclusions
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Acknowledgments
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Variables | Total n = 1097 | Anxiety Level (STAI-S) n = 962 | Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (IES-R) n = 810 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
n (%) | Absence of Anxiety + n = 669 (69.5%) | Presence of Anxiety ++ n = 293 (30.5%) | Low * Level of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder n = 691 (85.3%) | Moderate/Severe ** Level of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder n = 119 (14.7%) | |
Factors related of COVID-19 health crisis | |||||
Contracted COVID-19 | p = 0.675 | p = 0.100 | |||
No | 999 (92.3) | 613 (92.5) | 264 (91.7) | 638 (93.1) | 103 (88.8) |
Yes | 83 (7.7) | 50 (7.5) | 24 (8.3) | 47 (6.9) | 13 (11.2) |
Living status during lockdown | p = 0.235 | p = 0.137 | |||
Living alone | 228 (21.3) | 126 (19.2) | 67 (23.4) | 138 (20.3) | 31 (26.5) |
Living with others | 800 (75.0) | 511 (77.9) | 209 (72.8) | 522 (76.6) | 80 (68.4) |
Was not in lockdown | 39 (3.7) | 19 (2.9) | 11 (3.8) | 21 (3.1) | 6 (5.1) |
Overall ‘lockdown experience’ scoreMean (SD) | p< 0.001 | p< 0.001 | |||
46.5 (26.1) | 51.4 (25.9) | 38.9 (24.8) | 50.0 (26.6) | 37.0 (24.2) | |
Completely satisfied with the current management of their cancer | p< 0.001 | p= 0.001 | |||
Yes | 798 (74.2) | 529 (80.1) | 178 (61.8) | 522 (76.3) | 72 (62.1) |
No | 278 (25.8) | 131 (19.9) | 110 (38.2) | 162 (23.7) | 44 (37.9) |
Completely satisfied with the measures put in place at the hospital to reduce their exposure to COVID-19 | p< 0.001 | p= 0.001 | |||
Yes | 769 (76.0) | 497 (79.8) | 189 (68.7) | 510 (77.9) | 72 (63.7) |
No | 243 (24.0) | 126 (20.2) | 86 (31.3) | 145 (22.1) | 41 (36.3) |
Fear of going to hospital for treatment because of the risk of COVID-19 contamination | p< 0.001 | p< 0.001 | |||
No | 858 (80.4) | 555 (84.9) | 204 (70.8) | 582 (86.0) | 71 (60.7) |
Yes | 209 (19.6) | 99 (15.1) | 84 (29.2) | 95 (14.0) | 46 (39.3) |
Consulted a psychologist or psychiatrist during the pandemic | p< 0.001 | p= 0.001 | |||
No, never | 910 (84.9) | 573 (87.3) | 231 (79.4) | 586 (86.1) | 92 (78.0) |
Yes, only once | 86 (8.0) | 55 (8.4) | 23 (7.9) | 60 (8.8) | 8 (6.8) |
Yes, several times | 76 (7.1) | 28 (4.3) | 37 (12.7) | 35 (5.1) | 18 (15.2) |
Cancer-related factors | |||||
Type of cancer | p= 0.001 | p = 0.066 | |||
Hematological | 252 (24.3) | 168 (26.5) | 57 (20.2) | 163 (24.7) | 27 (23.5) |
Urological | 111 (10.7) | 83 (13.1) | 20 (7.1) | 83 (12.6) | 5 (4.3) |
Digestive | 164 (15.8) | 97 (15.3) | 43 (15.2) | 104 (15.8) | 16 (13.9) |
Breast/Gynecological | 429 (41.4) | 232 (36.7) | 142 (50.4) | 259 (39.3) | 57 (49.6) |
Other | 81 (7.8) | 53 (8.4) | 20 (7.1) | 50 (7.6) | 10 (8.7) |
Treatment phase | p< 0.001 | p = 0.209 | |||
On treatment | 647 (60.6) | 386 (59.4) | 186 (64.1) | 419 (62.1) | 66 (56.4) |
Post-treatment follow-up | 327 (30.7) | 223 (34.3) | 68 (23.5) | 206 (30.5) | 37 (31.6) |
About to initiate treatment | 93 (8.7) | 41 (6.3) | 36 (12.4) | 50 (7.4) | 14 (12.0) |
Fear of cancer recurrence (severity subscale) | p< 0.001 | p< 0.001 | |||
No (score < 13) | 301 (35.1) | 254 (44.3) | 23 (10.0) | 243 (41.0) | 12 (11.8) |
Yes (score ≥ 13) | 557 (64.9) | 319 (55.7) | 206 (90.0) | 349 (59.0) | 90 (88.2) |
Sociodemographic factors | |||||
Gender | p< 0.001 | p< 0.001 | |||
Women | 691 (63.2) | 376 (56.3) | 220 (75.3) | 406 (59.0) | 91 (76.5) |
Men | 403 (36.8) | 292 (43.7) | 72 (24.7) | 282 (41.0) | 28 (23.5) |
Age (years) | p= 0.002 | p = 0.074 | |||
22–50 | 156 (14.4) | 86 (13.0) | 63 (21.6) | 105 (15.4) | 28 (23.9) |
51–70 | 516 (47.7) | 343 (52.0) | 127 (43.6) | 355 (52.1) | 55 (47.0) |
71–92 | 409 (37.9) | 230 (35.0) | 101 (34.7) | 221 (32.5) | 34 (29.1) |
Living alone at home | p = 0.152 | p= 0.012 | |||
No | 806 (75.0) | 506 (76.9) | 206 (72.5) | 522 (76.9) | 78 (66.1) |
Yes | 269 (25.0) | 152 (23.1) | 78 (27.5) | 157 (23.1) | 40 (33.9) |
Education level | p = 0.071 | p = 0.282 | |||
No schooling/primary school | 95 (8.8) | 44 (6.7) | 22 (7.6) | 44 (6.5) | 12 (10.2) |
Secondary school | 457 (42.4) | 264 (40.1) | 137 (47.2) | 298 (43.8) | 46 (39.0) |
Higher education | 521 (48.8) | 351 (53.2) | 131 (45.2) | 339 (49.8) | 60 (50.8) |
Professional situation before lockdown | p= 0.025 | p= 0.031 | |||
Active | 173 (15.9) | 112 (16.8) | 47 (16.2) | 122 (17.8) | 22 (18.6) |
Inactive | 262 (24.0) | 156 (23.5) | 92 (31.7) | 170 (24.8) | 42 (35.6) |
Retirement | 654 (60.1) | 397 (59.7) | 151 (52.1) | 394 (57.4) | 54 (45.8) |
Had experienced difficult elements of life in the previous 6 months (i.e., before COVID-19 pandemic) | p< 0.001 | p< 0.001 | |||
No | 501 (45.7) | 358 (53.6) | 85 (29.1) | 336 (48.7) | 34 (28.6) |
Yes | 594 (54.3) | 310 (46.4) | 207 (70.9) | 354 (51.3) | 85 (71.4) |
Ref: Absence of Anxiety + | Presence of Anxiety (STAI-S) ++ n = 763 | Ref: No/Low-Level of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder * | Moderate/Severe Level of Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (IES-R) n= 635 | ||
---|---|---|---|---|---|
aOR | 95% CI | aOR | 95% CI | ||
Gender(Ref: Men) | Gender(Ref: Men) | ||||
Woman | 1.62 | 1.09–2.41 | Woman | 1.97 | 1.18–3.29 |
Age(Ref: 51–70) | Living alone at home(Ref: No) | ||||
22–50 | 1.54 | 0.97–2.44 | Yes | 1.63 | 1.01–2.63 |
71–92 | 1.65 | 1.08–2.51 | Overall ‘lockdown experience’ score | 0.98 | 0.97–0.99 |
Treatment phase (Ref: On treatment) | 0.83 | 0.55–1.25 | Fear of coming to the hospital for treatment because of the risk of COVID-19 contamination(Ref: No) | ||
Post-treatment follow-up | Yes | 3.49 | 2.11–5.79 | ||
About to initiate treatment | 2.31 | 1.25–4.28 | |||
Fear of cancer recurrence (severity subscale) (Ref: No (score < 13)) | |||||
Yes (score ≥ 13) | 5.02 | 3.07–8.18 | |||
Had experienced difficult elements of life in the previous 6 months (i.e., before COVID-19 pandemic) (Ref: No) | |||||
Yes | 2.11 | 1.45–3.07 | |||
Completely satisfied with the current management of their cancer (Ref: Yes) | |||||
No | 2.36 | 1.62–3.44 | |||
Fear of going to hospital for treatment because of the risk of COVID-19 contamination(Ref: No) | |||||
Yes | 2.43 | 1.61–3.67 |
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Marino, P.; Touzani, R.; Pakradouni, J.; Ben Soussan, P.; Gravis, G. The Psychological Distress of Cancer Patients following the COVID-19 Pandemic First Lockdown: Results from a Large French Survey. Cancers 2022, 14, 1794. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14071794
Marino P, Touzani R, Pakradouni J, Ben Soussan P, Gravis G. The Psychological Distress of Cancer Patients following the COVID-19 Pandemic First Lockdown: Results from a Large French Survey. Cancers. 2022; 14(7):1794. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14071794
Chicago/Turabian StyleMarino, Patricia, Rajae Touzani, Jihane Pakradouni, Patrick Ben Soussan, and Gwenaelle Gravis. 2022. "The Psychological Distress of Cancer Patients following the COVID-19 Pandemic First Lockdown: Results from a Large French Survey" Cancers 14, no. 7: 1794. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14071794
APA StyleMarino, P., Touzani, R., Pakradouni, J., Ben Soussan, P., & Gravis, G. (2022). The Psychological Distress of Cancer Patients following the COVID-19 Pandemic First Lockdown: Results from a Large French Survey. Cancers, 14(7), 1794. https://doi.org/10.3390/cancers14071794