Abstract 5942
Background
Fatigue represents a complex and frequent symptom in cancer patients and influences their quality of life. Although nurses consider the initial evaluation of the patient to be fundamental, this problem is underestimated in clinical practice and often leads to under-treatment. In addition, the patients and their families still often do not report the symptom because they fear that it will lead to a reduction or suspension of treatment or they think that the symptom is inevitable.
Methods
Mixed methods study. Data were collected using Brief Fatigue Inventory, patients’ interviews, focus groups with nurses and analysis of patients’ records. The setting is represented by two impatient departments of Oncology Institute of Southern Switzerland. Quantitative data were analysed with SPSS 22.0. For the interviews and focus groups, the analysis processes were conducted according to conventional content analysis using Nvivo 10 software.
Results
71 questionnaires were analysed, 39 males and 32 females. The mean age was 65,7±14 years. Fatigue was reported 5 times (7%) in nursing documents and 17 times problems fatigue was reported by nurses 5 times (7%) in patients’ records, while in 17 cases (23.9%) related problems were reported. 12 patients were interviewed. Five themes were identified: feeling powerless and aggressive, my strategies or what helps me, feeling reassured by the presence of family members, feeling reassured by nurses’ gesture, to be informed. Three themes were identified from nurses focus group: objectivity and subjectivity in the assessment of asthenia, nursing contribution in the multidisciplinary management of asthenia and difficulty in evaluating outcomes.
Conclusions
A not systematic approach to the management of fatigue emerges. Patients are satisfied with the care received but would like more information and specific interventions. Quantitative and qualitative results seem converge. Fatigue is still an underestimated problem in clinical practice. Specific training interventions for health professionals are needed.
Clinical trial identification
Editorial acknowledgement
Legal entity responsible for the study
The authors.
Funding
Scientific Research Advisory Board (ABREOC).
Disclosure
All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.
Resources from the same session
3809 - Differential expression of various miRNAs in Pediatric Cytogenetically Normal Acute Myeloid Leukemia (CN-AML)
Presenter: Vikas Gaur
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
4750 - Circulating tumour cells in head and neck and non-small cell lung cancer
Presenter: Kenneth O'Byrne
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
3704 - OX40/OX40L protein expression in Non-small cell lung cancer and its role in clinical outcome and relationships with other immune biomarkers
Presenter: Xiaoshen Zhang
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
2235 - Effect of Serum Survivin on Survival among Non-Small Cell Lung Cancer Patients; NCI Experience
Presenter: Reham Rashed
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
2788 - Enhanced performance of prognostic estimation from TCGA RNAseq data using transfer learning.
Presenter: Helene Vanacker
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
4689 - Analysis of Circulating Tumor DNA for Early Relapse Detection in Stage III Colorectal Cancer After Adjuvant Chemotherapy
Presenter: Samuel Jacobs
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
1454 - Ascites-derived circulating microRNAs as potential diagnostic biomarkers of gastric cancer-associated malignant ascites
Presenter: Hye Sook Han
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
5574 - Results from TRIO030, a Pre-Surgical Tissue-Acquisition Study to Evaluate Molecular Alterations in Human Breast Cancer Tissue Following Short-Term Exposure to the Androgen Receptor Antagonist Darolutamide
Presenter: Hsiao-Wang Chen
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
1787 - JMJD2A is a novel epigenetic factor of chemotherapeutic susceptibility in gastric cancer
Presenter: Yasushi Sato
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract
3140 - Phase 2 study of olaparib in previously treated advanced solid tumors with homologous recombination repair mutation (HRRm) or homologous recombination repair deficiency (HRD): LYNK-002
Presenter: David Hyman
Session: Poster Display session 3
Resources:
Abstract