Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study

Objective: More people are living with the consequences of cancer and comorbidity. We describe frequencies of comorbidities in a colorectal cancer cohort and associations with health and wellbeing outcomes up to five years following surgery. Methods: Prospective cohort study of 872 colorectal cance...

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Main Authors: Cummings, Amanda, Grimmett, Chloe, Calman, Lynn, Patel, Mubarak, Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna, Winter, Jane, Corner, Jessica, Din, Amy, Fenlon, Deborah, Richardson, Alison, Smith, Peter W., Foster, Claire
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2018
Online Access:https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/
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author Cummings, Amanda
Grimmett, Chloe
Calman, Lynn
Patel, Mubarak
Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna
Winter, Jane
Corner, Jessica
Din, Amy
Fenlon, Deborah
Richardson, Alison
Smith, Peter W.
Foster, Claire
author_facet Cummings, Amanda
Grimmett, Chloe
Calman, Lynn
Patel, Mubarak
Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna
Winter, Jane
Corner, Jessica
Din, Amy
Fenlon, Deborah
Richardson, Alison
Smith, Peter W.
Foster, Claire
author_sort Cummings, Amanda
building Nottingham Research Data Repository
collection Online Access
description Objective: More people are living with the consequences of cancer and comorbidity. We describe frequencies of comorbidities in a colorectal cancer cohort and associations with health and wellbeing outcomes up to five years following surgery. Methods: Prospective cohort study of 872 colorectal cancer patients recruited 2010-2012 from 29 UK centres, awaiting curative intent surgery. Questionnaires administered at baseline (pre-surgery), 3, 9, 15, 24 months, and annually up to 5 years. Comorbidities (and whether they limit activities) were self-reported by participants from 3 months. The EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-CR29 assessed global health/quality of life (QoL), symptoms and functioning. Longitudinal analyses investigated associations between comorbidities and health and wellbeing outcomes. Results: At baseline, the mean age of participants was 68 years, with 60% male and 65% colon cancer. 32% had one and 40% had >2 comorbidities. The most common comorbidities were high blood pressure (43%), arthritis/rheumatism (32%) and anxiety/depression (18%). Of those with comorbidities, 37% reported at least one that limited their daily activities. Reporting any limiting comorbidities was associated with poorer global health/QoL, worse symptoms and poorer functioning on all domains over 5 years’ follow-up. Controlling for the most common individual comorbidities, depression/anxiety had the greatest deleterious effect on outcomes. Conclusions: Clinical assessment should prioritise patient-reported comorbidities and whether these comorbidities limit daily activities, as important determinants of recovery of QoL, symptoms and functioning following colorectal cancer. Targeted interventions and support services, including multi-professional management and tailored assessment and follow-up, may aid recovery of health and wellbeing recovery in these individuals.
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spelling nottingham-550632019-08-01T04:30:16Z https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/ Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study Cummings, Amanda Grimmett, Chloe Calman, Lynn Patel, Mubarak Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna Winter, Jane Corner, Jessica Din, Amy Fenlon, Deborah Richardson, Alison Smith, Peter W. Foster, Claire Objective: More people are living with the consequences of cancer and comorbidity. We describe frequencies of comorbidities in a colorectal cancer cohort and associations with health and wellbeing outcomes up to five years following surgery. Methods: Prospective cohort study of 872 colorectal cancer patients recruited 2010-2012 from 29 UK centres, awaiting curative intent surgery. Questionnaires administered at baseline (pre-surgery), 3, 9, 15, 24 months, and annually up to 5 years. Comorbidities (and whether they limit activities) were self-reported by participants from 3 months. The EORTC QLQ-C30 and QLQ-CR29 assessed global health/quality of life (QoL), symptoms and functioning. Longitudinal analyses investigated associations between comorbidities and health and wellbeing outcomes. Results: At baseline, the mean age of participants was 68 years, with 60% male and 65% colon cancer. 32% had one and 40% had >2 comorbidities. The most common comorbidities were high blood pressure (43%), arthritis/rheumatism (32%) and anxiety/depression (18%). Of those with comorbidities, 37% reported at least one that limited their daily activities. Reporting any limiting comorbidities was associated with poorer global health/QoL, worse symptoms and poorer functioning on all domains over 5 years’ follow-up. Controlling for the most common individual comorbidities, depression/anxiety had the greatest deleterious effect on outcomes. Conclusions: Clinical assessment should prioritise patient-reported comorbidities and whether these comorbidities limit daily activities, as important determinants of recovery of QoL, symptoms and functioning following colorectal cancer. Targeted interventions and support services, including multi-professional management and tailored assessment and follow-up, may aid recovery of health and wellbeing recovery in these individuals. Wiley 2018-08-01 Article PeerReviewed application/pdf en https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/1/FINAL%20unlinked%20minor.pdf Cummings, Amanda, Grimmett, Chloe, Calman, Lynn, Patel, Mubarak, Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna, Winter, Jane, Corner, Jessica, Din, Amy, Fenlon, Deborah, Richardson, Alison, Smith, Peter W. and Foster, Claire (2018) Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study. Psycho-Oncology . ISSN 1099-1611 https://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/abs/10.1002/pon.4845 doi:10.1002/pon.4845 doi:10.1002/pon.4845
spellingShingle Cummings, Amanda
Grimmett, Chloe
Calman, Lynn
Patel, Mubarak
Permyakova, Natalia Vadimovna
Winter, Jane
Corner, Jessica
Din, Amy
Fenlon, Deborah
Richardson, Alison
Smith, Peter W.
Foster, Claire
Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title_full Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title_fullStr Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title_full_unstemmed Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title_short Comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: Results from the ColoREctal Well-being (CREW) cohort study
title_sort comorbidities are associated with poorer quality of life and functioning and worse symptoms in the 5 years following colorectal cancer surgery: results from the colorectal well-being (crew) cohort study
url https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/
https://eprints.nottingham.ac.uk/55063/