Article

Fear of progression after cancer recurrence: a mixed methods study

Details

Citation

Stewart RJ, Humphris GM, Donaldson J & Cruickshank S (2024) Fear of progression after cancer recurrence: a mixed methods study. Frontiers in Psychology, 15 (2691-6177). https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2024.1479540

Abstract
Background: The recurrence of cancer will significantly impact an individual’s quality of life (QoL) as they adjust to living with a condition that is often incurable. Patients remain at risk of further progression following recurrence, but fear of cancer progression (FOP) at this time is not commonly examined. Importantly, these fears are known to reach levels in which there are consequences for QoL. Methods: This study sought to explore levels of FOP, health-related QoL, anxiety, and depression in patients after a recurrence of their cancer in a longitudinal manner. With the study taking place throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, an assessment of fears related to cancer and the pandemic was included. A sequential mixed method approach was employed for complementarity and expansion purposes. A questionnaire was administered to 44 participants on three different occasions one month apart. A sub-sample of 10 participants then took part in semi-structured interviews. Findings: FOP was present at moderate levels in patients with a cancer recurrence, with over a third of the sample reaching levels considered dysfunctional. Levels of fear were stable over three months and were not predicted by select demographic or clinical factors. On average, depression was low, but anxiety reached mild levels. Challenges to health-related QoL were evident. Low levels of concern about COVID-19 in relation to cancer were reported. Integrated findings provided more nuanced answers to the research questions, including more specific worries about cancer progression. Implications: Findings support the development of psychosocial interventions to manage FOP, and future recommendations are provided. Identifying the presence of fears not commonly screened for after cancer recurrence adds to the existing knowledge in this area. Through acknowledging and attending to the psychosocial impact of FOP, healthcare professionals can provide tailored support to enhance the well-being of those with a recurrence of their cancer.

Keywords
cancer recurrence; fear of progression; fear of recurrence; quality of life; oncology

Journal
Frontiers in Psychology: Volume 15

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/2024
Publication date online25/09/2024
Date accepted by journal16/09/2024
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/36393
PublisherFrontiers Media SA
eISSN1664-1078

People (2)

Professor Jayne Donaldson

Professor Jayne Donaldson

Dean of Faculty Health Sciences & Sport, Health Sciences Stirling

Dr Ross Stewart

Dr Ross Stewart

Lecturer in Health Sciences, Health Sciences Stirling

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