From the Journals

Lack of after care leaves cancer patients in ‘survivorship abyss’


 

Discussions must be part of standard of care

Dr. Mazariego emphasized that for prostate cancer survivorship to improve, conversations about the psychosocial needs of patients must be normalized and made routine. Discussions about post-treatment side effects that cause functional impairments and are stressful to relationships must be embedded into the standards of care, she added. This will allow physicians to use these kinds of conversations “as a springboard for referrals to appropriate care.”

“Patients of all ages will have concerns related to sex and sexual function, whether you ask about them or not,” said Brad Zebrack, PhD, MSW, MPH, professor at the University of Michigan School of Social Work, Ann Arbor, who was approached for comment.

At the very least, physicians should be prepared to “acknowledge and describe possible effects of therapy on sex and sexual function and follow up by describing available supports for education and either individual or couples counseling,” said Dr. Zebrack, who is also a member of the health behavior and outcomes research program at the Rogel Cancer Center.

Physicians can also refer patients to evidence-based resources and toolkits, he said. He noted that Will2Love offers self-help programs for cancer-related sexual problems and is “an outstanding resource.”

Distress screening needed

Universal psychosocial distress screening is needed to identify men with prostate cancer who have high levels of distress, argues Jeff Dunn, AO, PhD, who is CEO of the Prostate Cancer Foundation of Australia (PCFA), in Sydney.

Without this, men will not seek help for their unmet needs, Dr. Dunn noted in a 2019 editorial in the European Journal of Cancer Care.

The unmet psychosocial needs of prostate cancer patients and their partners “are highly prevalent,” said Dr. Dunn and co-author Suzanne K. Chambers, AO, PhD, dean of the Faculty of Health at the University of Technology Sydney. “...[F]or many prostate cancer survivors, the physical, social, psychological and relationship challenges will be long term, if not lifelong,” they write.

Even in Australia, where 1 in every 6 men are expected to be diagnosed with prostate cancer by age 85, efforts to improve survivorship care have not produced the desired results, they note.

In 2019, the PCFA published a monograph in which the organization recommended routine distress screenings and referrals to evidence-based psychosocial care for prostate cancer survivors. The foundation predicted that it would be “a game-changer for every Australian man impacted by the disease.”

“Yet, we still do not have a national survivorship care plan for prostate cancer survivors in Australia,” Dr. Mazariego said.

Left untreated, the psychosocial effects of prostate cancer “are considerable and certainly factors that should be considered as a threat to well-being,” she emphasized.

“Certainly, accumulation of unmet psychosocial needs increases risks for depression and suicide, which is true in both cancer and noncancer populations,” said Dr. Zebrack.

Data back this up. One study of patients with prostate cancer found that after diagnosis, 1 in 4 experienced anxiety, and 1 in 5 experienced depression. Another study found that the risk for suicide was higher among men with prostate cancer during the first year after diagnosis than among men with other solid-organ malignancies.

More recently, a 2018 population-based Australian cohort study of men in New South Wales revealed that the risk for death by suicide was 70% higher among men who had been diagnosed with prostate cancer compared with men in the general population. This risk was higher within the first year following diagnosis and was higher in men with nonlocalized disease, those who were single, those who were living in a major city, and those who were unmarried.

Dr. Mazariego and the team reporting the survey found that men who received supportive care had a greater chance of reconciling living with functional impairments. “Receiving adequate survivorship care and trusting patient-clinician relationships appeared to be associated with greater resilience and positivity in the men’s acceptance of cancer-related, long-term challenges and personal limitations,” they note.

Recommended Reading

JAMA editor resigns over controversial podcast
MDedge Internal Medicine
SNP chips deemed ‘extremely unreliable’ for identifying rare variants
MDedge Internal Medicine
Paving the way for diversity in clinical trials
MDedge Internal Medicine
Delirium risk factors identified in ICU cancer patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
Starting April 5, patients can read your notes: 5 things to consider
MDedge Internal Medicine
New guidelines on antibiotic prescribing focus on shorter courses
MDedge Internal Medicine
Cancer screening stopped by pandemic: Repercussions to come?
MDedge Internal Medicine
Palliative care helpful but underutilized for blood cancer patients
MDedge Internal Medicine
FDA panel votes against 2 cancer indications but backs 4 of 6
MDedge Internal Medicine
Pediatric cancer survivors at risk for opioid misuse
MDedge Internal Medicine