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Impact of Adverse Health Outcomes (ahos) on Self-Reported Physical and Mental Health in U.S. Testicular Cancer Survivors (TCS).

Journal of clinical oncology(2022)

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摘要
12080 Background: No study has systematically evaluated the impact of AHOs on PROMIS-validated measures of physical and mental health in TCS. Patient-reported outcomes are increasingly recognized as crucial in TCS follow-up, given their young age at diagnosis and high cure rates. Methods: Eligible TCS (age < 60 yr at diagnosis, given first-line cisplatin-based chemotherapy (CHEM)) completed comprehensive health surveys, prescription drug usage, and PROMIS global physical health and global mental health measures. PROMIS scores were compared to US subpopulation norms for similar-age men. 2017-2018 NHANES data were compared with select survey responses. Linear regression examined the relationship between individual AHOs (pain, obesity, cisplatin-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN)), cisplatin-related AHOs (CIPN, hearing loss, vertigo, tinnitus, renal disease), cardiovascular (CVD) AHOs (7 AHO), and all AHOs taken together (24 AHOs), with PROMIS global physical and mental health measures. Regression models were adjusted for age, cisplatin dose, time since CHEM, education, income, smoking, and alcohol. Results: Among 213 TCS (median age at evaluation: 46 yr; IQR: 38-52 yr; median time since CHEM completion: 10.6 yr; IQR: 6.8-16.6 yr), the most common AHOs were tinnitus (60%), self-reported hearing loss (60%), CIPN (55%), and Raynaud Phenomenon (43%). The median number of AHOs was 5 (IQR: 3-7), and 12% of TCS had ≥10 AHOs. Only 1.4% of TCS had no AHOs. Compared to NHANES men without cancer, controlling for age, education, and race, fewer TCS currently smoked (3% vs. 22%; P
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