Psychosocial factors and treatment satisfaction after radical prostatectomy
Background Sexual and urinary side effects of prostate cancer treatment have been well described in the literature, but less is known about the psychosocial effects of prostate cancer treatment.
Objective To prospectively evaluate physical and psychosocial functioning after diagnosis of prostate cancer and factors associated with treatment satisfaction after prostate cancer treatment.
Methods Patients diagnosed with prostate cancer at a university-based urology department were invited to participate in this internet-based study. Validated questionnaires were used to evaluate health-related quality of life (HRQoL) domains at pretreatment baseline following diagnosis and at 1, 3, 6, and 12 months after treatment. Domains of HRQoL included sexual, urinary, and bowel functioning; anxiety and depression; and sleep disturbance, pain, and fatigue. Linear repeated measures models were used to examine changes in self-reported measures at each time point.
Results Of 105 men diagnosed with prostate cancer enrolled in the study, 54 completed assessments through 12 months. Decreased erectile function and sexual HRQoL following treatment were not significantly associated with worse treatment satisfaction over time. Instead, treatment satisfaction was significantly associated (P < .01) with anxiety (r, .28-.60), depression (r, .32-.48), fatigue (r, .40-.56), pain (r, .32-.61), sleep disturbance (r, .51-.59), and bladder problems (r, .41-.63).
Limitations Not all patients were enrolled or completed all longitudinal questionnaires, which may bias the results because of unmeasurable factors. We were not able to identify improvements or declines in HRQoL more than 12 months after treatment.
Conclusions Despite declines in erectile function and sexual domains, treatment satisfaction was more closely related to emotional, psychosocial, and nonsexual effects. The findings underscore the importance of assessing HRQoL outcomes beyond physical functioning, which can yield opportunities to improve satisfaction.
Accepted for publication April 20, 2018
Correspondence Shilajit D Kundu, MD; s-kundu@northwestern.edu
Disclosures The authors report no disclosures/conflicts of interest.
Citation JCSO 2018;16(3):e130-e137
©2018 Frontline Medical Communications
doi https://doi.org/10.12788/jcso.0401
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Understanding potential treatment-related changes in HRQoL can be challenging for men when choosing providers and different therapeutic options. The increasing complexity of treatment in prostate cancer has created an opportunity to not only understand efficacy on cancer control but also focus on meaningful patient-reported outcomes. Hospitals and medical groups are increasingly aware of the importance of improving the patient care experience. Objective measures of patient satisfaction for health care providers, such as the Press-Ganey and Net Promoter score, exist to measure and improve patient experience. In prostate cancer, clinicians and large groups, including governmental agencies such as the US Preventive Services Task Force, have often focused on declines in urinary and erectile function15 without considering the full impact of prostate cancer treatment on global HRQoL. Our study was a prospective, longitudinal, self-reported examination of the impact, positive and negative, of prostate cancer treatment over a 12-month period.
Numerous studies have documented the treatment-related side effects of erectile, urinary, and bowel dysfunction in patients treated for prostate cancer, which may occur after definitive local therapies.5,16-18 The present study shows a similar impact on urinary, bowel, and erectile domains after treatment. Although erectile function scores remained lower through the course of the 12-month study, bowel and bladder domains returned to baseline by month 12. Unlike other studies, we also examined psychosocial and nonurological aspects of prostate cancer treatment. We found that there was a measurable and significant positive impact on other HRQoL measurements such as decreased anxiety. Despite a variety of declines across HRQoL domains, most patients reported that their results were largely as they had expected, and their side effects were the same or better than they had expected. No patient in the cohort reported being dissatisfied with his overall treatment, and more than 90% of patients were mostly or completely satisfied with their treatment choice. This highlights the point that while sexual and other urological domains of HRQoL are important, impairments in these areas do not necessarily reflect how many patients perceive success or satisfaction with their treatment choice. We also showed correlations between treatment satisfaction and improvement in sleep, anxiety, depression, and fatigue. It is worth noting that although there were decreases in the erectile and sexual function domains after treatment, those factors were not correlated with overall treatment satisfaction. Those factors may not routinely be assessed before, during, and after treatment for prostate cancer in most clinical encounters. However, because they were strongly associated with satisfaction with treatment outcomes in this study, identification in impairments may lead to opportunities to intervene and improve the patient experience. Therefore, important “teachable moments” may be missed (for both patients and providers) during treatment decision-making encounters if other factors beyond sexual and urological outcomes are not adequately considered and addressed. Furthermore, the results of our study may help clinicians counsel patients on their expectations for their recovery after surgery and identify particular issues related to HRQoL to pay close attention to in follow-up visits.
Strengths of our study include its prospective nature, which allowed evaluation of HRQoL outcomes at multiple time points throughout the first year after treatment. In addition, we used existing patient-reported outcome tools validated by the NIH to assess changes in HRQoL. PROMIS is an NIH-supported tool that can be leveraged in the pre- and posttreatment periods to identify patients who have impairments with HRQoL. It can provide clinicians with a unique opportunity to detect and intervene in setbacks and side effects to improve patient satisfaction and HRQoL.
,Limitations of the current study include that most patients selected surgery for their treatment choice and that not all patients completed all longitudinal questionnaires, although this is expected in longitudinal studies of this nature. Although all the patients were approached and encouraged to participate, many did not participate and were not captured. In addition, not all patients completed end-of-study surveys. These factors may have biased our results because of unmeasurable factors related to nonparticipation or dropout. Our study encompassed the preoperative period up to 12 months postoperatively, which may fail to identify improvements or declines in HRQoL that may occur more than 12 months postoperatively, particularly related to continence and erectile function. The participants were enrolled by 6 surgeons, and we were not able to standardize the preoperative counseling either preoperatively or postoperatively, which may have biased our results. Finally, our study population consisted of predominantly white, married men of higher socioeconomic status; therefore, our results may not be generalizable to newly diagnosed prostate cancer patients overall.
Conclusions
By using validated self-administered questionnaires, we found that despite decreased sexual and urinary function, patients treated for prostate cancer were satisfied with their treatment choice. Correlates to higher patient satisfaction included decreased anxiety, depression, fatigue, and sleep disturbances.