Surviving rectal cancer at the cost of a colostomy: global survey of long-term health-related quality of life in 10 countries.
Author
Kristensen, Helle ØThyø, Anne
Emmertsen, Katrine J
Smart, Neil J
Pinkney, Thomas
Warwick, Andrea M
Pang, Dong
Elfeki, Hossam
Shalaby, Mostafa
Emile, Sameh H
Abdelkhalek, Mohamed
Zuhdy, Mohammad
Poskus, Tomas
Dulskas, Audrius
Horesh, Nir
Furnée, Edgar J B
Verkuijl, Sanne J
Rama, Nuno José
Domingos, Hugo
Maciel, João
Solis-Peña, Alejandro
Espín-Basany, Eloy
Hidalgo-Pujol, Marta
Biondo, Sebastiano
Sjövall, Annika
Christensen, Peter
Publication date
2022-11-02
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background: Colorectal cancer management may require an ostomy formation; however, a stoma may negatively impact health-related quality of life (HRQoL). This study aimed to compare generic and stoma-specific HRQoL in patients with a permanent colostomy after rectal cancer across different countries. Method: A cross-sectional cohorts of patients with a colostomy after rectal cancer in Denmark, Sweden, Spain, the Netherlands, China, Portugal, Australia, Lithuania, Egypt, and Israel were invited to complete questionnaires regarding demographic and socioeconomic factors along with the Colostomy Impact (CI) score, European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer (EORTC) Quality of Life Questionnaire (QLQ-C30) and five anchor questions assessing colostomy impact on HRQoL. The background characteristics of the cohorts from each country were compared and generic HRQoL was measured with the EORTC QLQ-C30 presented for the total cohort. Results were compared with normative data of reference European populations. The predictors of reduced HRQoL were investigated by multivariable logistic regression, including demographic and socioeconomic factors and stoma-related problems. Results: A total of 2557 patients were included. Response rates varied between 51-93 per cent. Mean time from stoma creation was 2.5-6.2 (range 1.1-39.2) years. A total of 25.8 per cent of patients reported that their colostomy impairs their HRQoL 'some'/'a lot'. This group had significantly unfavourable scores across all EORTC subscales compared with patients reporting 'no'/'a little' impaired HRQoL. Generic HRQoL differed significantly between countries, but resembled the HRQoL of reference populations. Multivariable logistic regression showed that stoma dysfunction, including high CI score (OR 3.32), financial burden from the stoma (OR 1.98), unemployment (OR 2.74), being single/widowed (OR 1.35) and young age (OR 1.01 per year) predicted reduced stoma-related HRQoL. Conclusion: Overall HRQoL is preserved in patients with a colostomy after rectal cancer, but a quarter of the patients interviewed reported impaired HRQoL. Differences among several countries were reported and socioeconomic factors correlated with reduced quality of life.Citation
Kristensen HØ, Thyø A, Emmertsen KJ, Smart NJ, Pinkney T, Warwick AM, Pang D, Elfeki H, Shalaby M, Emile SH, Abdelkhalek M, Zuhdy M, Poskus T, Dulskas A, Horesh N, Furnée EJB, Verkuijl SJ, Rama NJ, Domingos H, Maciel J, Solis-Peña A, Espín-Basany E, Hidalgo-Pujol M, Biondo S, Sjövall A, Christensen P. Surviving rectal cancer at the cost of a colostomy: global survey of long-term health-related quality of life in 10 countries. BJS Open. 2022 Nov 2;6(6):zrac085. doi: 10.1093/bjsopen/zrac085Type
ArticleAdditional Links
https://academic.oup.com/bjsopenPMID
36546340Journal
BJS OpenPublisher
Oxford University Pressae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1093/bjsopen/zrac085