Table 1.
Study | Design | Characteristics of the sample | Major Findings |
Bacon et al. (2002) | • Retrospective comparison of patients and aged-matched healthy controls using the SF-36, UCLA Prostate Cancer Index and the CARES-SF | • 783 men with PCA (localized disease), no breakdown by treatment; 1928 age-matched controls | • Patients had poorer sexual, urinary and bowel functioning but not role function or mental health • Patients reported more bother from sexual, urinary and bowel functioning • Symptoms were related to both physical and psychosocial QOL domains |
Balderstone and Towell (2003) | • Retrospective study of distress using FACT-P and the Hospital Anxiety & Depression Scale | • 94 men with PCA in various stages | • Prevalence of distress: 38% • Distress was related to poorer physical functioning and lower social support |
Clark et al. (2003) | • Retrospective comparison of patients and normal controls using the SF-12 and purpose-made symptom measures | • 349 men with early-stage PCA and 398 controls | • Bowel, urinary and sexual symptoms created greater bother for men with PCA than for controls • Bowel, then sexual, symptoms had greatest impact on QOL |
Curran et al. (1997) | • Baseline measures of QOL (EORTC-QLQ) in patients with advanced PCA | • 638 advanced-stage PCA patients in 1 of 3 groups: Locoregional; Poor prognosis metastatic; Hormone resistant | • Four scales distinguished between the 3 groups • Locoregional group had better QOL than metastatic, or hormone resistant group • Some physicians under-rated patients' level of pain |
Heim and Oei (1993) | • Retrospective study using the McGill Pain Questionnaire, Beck Depression Inventory, and State-Trait Anxiety Inventory | • 47 patients; 80% described as 'non-metastatic' | • 43% reported pain; 20% reported depression • Pain was correlated with depression and anxiety, increased use of analgesics, and later stages of disease |
Helgason et al. (1996) | • Retrospective observational study of PCA patients and age-matched controls' sexual, urinary and bowel functions using the Radiumhemmet Scale of Sexual Function | • 342 patients with mixed stage and treatment status, compared with 319 controls of similar age | • Both groups experienced decline in sexual functioning but more PCA patients were severely distressed • Urinary and bowel symptoms were less common and few were severely distressed as a result of them |
McBride et al. (2000) | • Cross-sectional study – mail-out to PCA and breast cancer patients using Impact of Events Scale and measures of lifestyle activities | • 920 (420 PCA; 93% radical prostatectomy. 500 were breast cancer patients) usable responses from 1667 questionnaires distributed | • Breast cancer patients were younger, sicker and had higher trauma scores • Trauma scores were negatively related to time from diagnosis • Among the PCA patients, regular exercisers had lower trauma scores |
Schag et al. (1994) | • Retrospective observational study of QOL in cancer survivors using CARES | • 278 survivors (disease free); 57 lung, 117 colon and 104 PCA | • QOL improved for colon cancer but decreased for PCA survivors • All groups reported a range of QOL issues |
Stone et al. (2000) | • Retrospective comparison of fatigue and depression in cancer patients and healthy controls using EORTC-QLQ-30 and HADS | • 227 cancer patients, including 62 with PCA; 98 controls | • Fatigue is common in cancer, especially those with advanced disease • Fatigue related to depression, anxiety, pain, dyspnoea |