Abstract 320P
Background
Patients newly diagnosed with malignancies amidst the COVID19 pandemic outbreak face the psychological double whammy of a gruesome diagnosis and a public health crisis. We conducted a cross-sectional survey to examine the association between common psychological disorders and cancer patients’ perception of COVID19’s real-life impact.
Methods
Newly diagnosed cancer patients were surveyed with a two-part questionnaire constructed by oncologists and clinical psychologists. It first explored patients’ perceptions of pandemic’s impact on cancer care resources, treatment quality, health-seeking behaviour and other concerns. The second part involved the measurement of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (abbreviated PCL-5), anxiety and depression (emotion thermometer) and intolerance to uncertainty (IUS12), where patients were assigned into high and low-risk groups accordingly. Their associations were observed and analysed using chi-square test.
Results
103 new cancer patients in Hong Kong were surveyed in May 2020. Results revealed there were more worries about the impact of COVID19 on cancer care manpower, and secondly about risk of infection during OPD waiting time, in patients of high risk group for PTSD (p= 0.011; p=0.015 respectively), anxiety (p=0.013; p=0.034), depression (p=0.017; p=0.043) and uncertainty tolerance (p=0.004; p=0.044). High IUS12 score was associated with more worry on pandemic’s impact on progress of cancer research and drug development (p=0.03). Patients of the high anxiety risk group were less likely to accept hospital’s “no visitor” policy during admission (p=0.013). High-risk group for anxiety (p=0.024) and depression (p=0.044) tend to consider the availability of media information on COVID19’s impact on cancer as inadequate. Patients of high PTSD risk group showed greater fear of being infected by family/carers (p=0.005).
Conclusions
This original survey revealed the potential value of psychometrics in understanding cancer patient’s perception of COVID19’s impact and predicting particular concerns in patients with different psychological phenotypes, allowing better-tailored pandemic time cancer care.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Kowloon Central Cluster Research Committee Research Grant 20/21, Hospital Authority, Hong Kong, China.
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
360P - Number of lymph nodes examined was not an independent risk factor for the survival of patients with stage IA1-2 lung adenocarcinoma undergoing sublobar resection
Presenter: Zhenbin Qiu
Session: e-Poster Display Session
361P - Radiomic model predicting radiological response after thoracic stereotactic body radiotherapy regardless of tumor histology and staging
Presenter: Ben Man Fei Cheung
Session: e-Poster Display Session
362P - Integrative and comparative genomic analysis and immune microenvironment features of lung cancer patients with tuberculosis
Presenter: Xiaoling Xu
Session: e-Poster Display Session
363P - Genetic predisposition for pre-invasive lung adenocarcinoma manifesting as ground-glass nodules with family history of lung cancer
Presenter: Rui Fu
Session: e-Poster Display Session
364P - A deep learning model for the classification of lung cancer
Presenter: Gouji Toyokawa
Session: e-Poster Display Session
365P - Utilization of on-site pathology evaluation for lung cancer diagnosis in the Philippines’ National University Hospital
Presenter: Rich Ericson King
Session: e-Poster Display Session
367P - Detection of epidermal growth factor receptor mutations (EGFR-mut) from cell-free DNA in pleural effusion (PE-DNA) of patients with non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC)
Presenter: Kirsty Lee
Session: e-Poster Display Session
368P - Real-world characteristics, treatment, and outcomes of stage III non-small cell lung cancer in Japan: SOLUTION study
Presenter: Haruyasu Murakami
Session: e-Poster Display Session
369P - The surgical perspective in neoadjuvant immunotherapy for resectable non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Long Jiang
Session: e-Poster Display Session
371P - Real-world insights into treatment patterns and outcomes in stage III non-small cell lung cancer (NSCLC): KINDLE study India analysis
Presenter: Kumar Prabhash
Session: e-Poster Display Session