Pain, Depression, and Fatigue in Community-Dwelling Adults With and Without a History of Cancer

TitlePain, Depression, and Fatigue in Community-Dwelling Adults With and Without a History of Cancer
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2006
AuthorsReyes-Gibby, CC, Aday, LAnn, Anderson, KO, Mendoza, TR, Cleeland, CS
JournalJournal of Pain and Symptom Management
Volume32
Issue2
Pagination118-28
Call Numberpubs_2006_Reyes-Gibby.pdf
KeywordsHealth Conditions and Status, Risk Taking
Abstract

The State of the Science Report by the National Cancer Institute on Symptom Management in Cancer identified gaps in understanding the epidemiology of pain, depression, and fatigue, and called for studies that will identify the extent of risk for these symptoms among those with cancer relative to other populations. Using year 2000 data from the Health and Retirement Study, a survey of a nationally representative sample of adults aged andgt;/=50, we evaluated whether respondents with a history of cancer had excess risk for pain, depression, and fatigue compared to those without a history of cancer. We also compared clustering/co-occurrence of symptoms. Controlling for the confounding effects of comorbidities, sociodemographic, and access to care factors, respondents with a history of cancer had higher risk for fatigue (OR=1.45; 95 CI=1.29,1.63), depression (OR=1.21; 95 CI=1.06,1.37), and pain (OR=1.15; 95 CI=1.03,1.28). Symptom clusters were also more prevalent among those with a history of cancer (Pandlt;0.001), with the pain-depression-fatigue cluster as most prevalent.

URLhttp://www.sciencedirect.com/
Endnote Keywords

CANCER/Depression/risk factors

Endnote ID

16750

Citation Key7091