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Quality of life, psychological distress, and prognostic perceptions in patients with multiple myeloma.

Elizabeth K O' DonnellYael N ShapiroAndrew J YeeOmar NadeemBonnie Y HuJacob P LaubachAndrew R BranaganKenneth C AndersonClifton C MoNikhil C MunshiIrene M GhobrialAdam S SperlingEmerentia A AgyemangJill N BurkeCynthia C HarringtonPaul G RichardsonNoopur S RajeAreej R El-Jawahri
Published in: Cancer (2022)
This study discusses 180 patients with MM (newly diagnosed [n = 60], 2-3 lines [n = 60], and ≥4 lines of therapy [n = 60]). Quality of life, symptom burden, and fatigue scores do not differ by lines of therapy. There are also no statistically significant differences in psychological distress by line of therapy. The rates of clinically significant depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder symptoms are 23.9%, 23.9%, and 24.4%, respectively. Most patients (84.7%) report that their oncologist told them their cancer was incurable, but only 30.6% acknowledge that they are terminally ill, and 42.0% report that they thought their cancer was incurable.
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