Clinically distinct trajectories of fatigue and their longitudinal relationship with the disturbance of personal goals following a cancer diagnosis.
Fabiola MüllerMarrit A TuinmanMoniek JanseJosué AlmansaMirjam A G SprangersAns SminkAdelita V RanchorJoke FleerMariët HagedoornPublished in: British journal of health psychology (2017)
The fatigue and goal disturbance experienced from diagnosis to 18 months post-diagnosis differ considerably for subgroups of patients with cancer. Fatigue and concrete goal disturbance are persistent burdens in the majority of patients. Investigating symptom burden beyond average trends can guide clinicians to identify patients most in need for treatment. Targeting goal disturbance might benefit the psychological well-being in patients suffering from persistent symptoms. Statement of contribution What is already known on this subject? Fatigue is a common and distressing symptom at all stages of the cancer experience. Earlier studies suggest that many patients recover from fatigue after treatment completion. Patients with cancer experience disturbance in their personal goals, which is related to poor psychological well-being. What does this study add? Developments of fatigue and goal disturbance differ between subgroups of patients with cancer but co-occur within these subgroups. About 30% of the patients experience severe fatigue after diagnosis, of which only few patients recover within 18 months post-diagnosis. Targeting goal disturbance might benefit patients with severe and ongoing symptoms.