• J Pain Symptom Manage · Dec 2003

    Fatigue after treatment for malignant and benign bone and soft tissue tumors.

    • Petra Servaes, Stans Verhagen, H W Bart Schreuder, René P H Veth, and Gijs Bleijenberg.
    • Department of Medical Psychology, University Medical Center Nijmegen, Nijmegen, The Netherlands.
    • J Pain Symptom Manage. 2003 Dec 1; 26 (6): 1113-22.

    AbstractFatigue has been mentioned as an important complaint in several groups of disease-free patients after curative treatment for cancer. However, it has never been investigated in a sample of patients who have been treated for a bone or soft tissue tumor in the past. In the current study, these patients participated. Measurement included posted questionnaires at baseline and at follow-up (two years later). Baseline results indicated that fatigue is a severe problem for 28% of the investigated patients. Percentages were equal for patients who were treated for malignant or benign tumors. Fatigue complaints seem to be most severe for patients who finished treatment relatively recently, and for patients who had to undergo more than one operation. In addition, fatigue was associated with several psychological and physical variables. At follow-up, the majority of all patients who were severely fatigued at baseline continued to be severely fatigued. Severe fatigue at follow-up was predicted by oncological complications after initial treatment, less optimism, and more somatization. It can be concluded that fatigue is an important problem for more than a quarter of a sample of patients who have been treated for a malignant or benign bone or soft tissue tumor in the past.

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