An examination of the relationship of patient modifiable and non-modifiable characteristics with fear of cancer recurrence among colorectal cancer survivors

Menée aux Etats-Unis à partir de données portant sur 120 patients ayant survécu à un cancer colorectal (durée depuis la fin des traitements : de 6 à 36 mois), cette étude analyse l’association entre la peur de la récidive et des caractéristiques modifiables (comportementales, sociales, cognitives) et non modifiables (âge, sévérité de la maladie, etc.) des patients

Supportive Care in Cancer, sous presse, 2020, résumé

Résumé en anglais

Purpose : Fear of cancer recurrence (FCR) is one of the most common and distressing issues affecting cancer survivors. This study examined (1) the association between modifiable cognitive, behavioral, and social characteristics and FCR, (2) the association between non-modifiable characteristics and FCR, and (3) the relative contributions of modifiable and non-modifiable characteristics to FCR. Methods : Participants (n=120) had been diagnosed with colorectal cancer and completed cancer treatment in the past 6 to 36 months. Participants completed self-report measures of modifiable cognitive (e.g., beliefs about worry), behavioral (e.g., health-related reassurance seeking), and social (e.g., social constraints) characteristics. Non-modifiable characteristics (e.g., age, disease severity) were assessed via self-report and medical record review. Findings : Modifiable (i.e., perceived risk, self-efficacy, positive beliefs about worry, negative beliefs about worry, intolerance of uncertainty, rumination, reassurance seeking, health-related reassurance seeking, social constraints) and non-modifiable (i.e., age, gender, disease severity, neuroticism, conscientiousness) characteristics were associated with FCR (p’s<.05). Hierarchical linear regression analyses demonstrated that modifiable characteristics accounted for an additional 15% of the variance (p<.001) beyond that accounted for by non-modifiable characteristics (R2=.45, p<.001), with perceived risk (B=.35) and health-related reassurance seeking (B=.22) emerging as significant predictors of FCR (p’s<.05). Implications : Results identify non-modifiable characteristics that may serve as risk factors for greater FCR and identify specific modifiable characteristics (i.e., perceived risk, health-related reassurance seeking) to be targeted by interventions to reduce FCR among cancer survivors.