4.7 Article

Chronic fatigue in Hodgkin lymphoma survivors and associations with anxiety, depression and comorbidity

Journal

BRITISH JOURNAL OF CANCER
Volume 110, Issue 4, Pages 868-874

Publisher

NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1038/bjc.2013.779

Keywords

Hodgkin lymphoma; cancer survivors; population based; quality of life; fatigue; anxiety; depression

Categories

Funding

  1. charitable Jonker-Driessen Foundation
  2. Netherlands organisation for health research and development (Zon-MW)
  3. PHAROS: Populationbased HAematological Registry for Observational Studies [80-82500-98-01007]
  4. Cancer Research Award from the Dutch Cancer Society [UVT-2009-4349]

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Background: Fatigue is a frequent and persistent problem among Hodgkin lymphoma (HL) survivors. We investigated the prevalence of clinically relevant fatigue in HL survivors and the relation between fatigue and anxiety and depression. Methods: Fatigue was measured through the generic European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire (QLQ-C30) and Fatigue Assessment Scale (FAS). Anxiety and depression were measured with the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale. Questionnaires were mailed to 267 HL survivors. Results were compared with a Dutch age-matched normative population. Results: Response rate was 68% (median age 46 years, mean time since diagnosis 4.6 years). Prevalence of fatigue was significantly higher among HL survivors than in the norm population (FAS 41% vs 23%, QLQ-C30 43% vs 28%), as were fatigue levels. There was a significant association between fatigue, anxiety and depression. Of the HL survivors with high symptom levels of depression, 97% also reported fatigue. In multivariate analysis, depression was strongly associated with high levels of fatigue and, to a lesser extent, anxiety and comorbidity. Conclusions: Prevalence rates of fatigue are significantly higher in HL survivors than in the general population and differences are clinically relevant. Depression and anxiety were strongly associated with high levels of fatigue. Reducing fatigue levels by treatment of depression and anxiety should be further explored.

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