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ePoster Display

1636P - Health behavior of cancer patients during COVID-19 pandemic. Focus head neck cancer

Date

16 Sep 2021

Session

ePoster Display

Topics

Clinical Research;  COVID-19 and Cancer;  Supportive and Palliative Care

Tumour Site

Head and Neck Cancers

Presenters

Judith Büntzel

Citation

Annals of Oncology (2021) 32 (suppl_5): S1129-S1163. 10.1016/annonc/annonc713

Authors

J. Büntzel1, O. Micke2, A. Büssing3, J. Büntzel4

Author affiliations

  • 1 Hematology And Oncology, Universitätsmedizin Göttingen, 37075 - Goettingen/DE
  • 2 Radiooncology, Franziskus Hospital, 33615 - Bielefeld/DE
  • 3 Professorship For Quality Of Life, Spirituality And Coping, Witten Herdecke, 58313 - Herdecke/DE
  • 4 Otolaryngology, Südharz-Klinikum, 99734 - Nordhausen/DE

Resources

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Abstract 1636P

Background

During pandemic coping strategies become very important for for each individual cancer patient. Are there any changes in health behavior of our patients due to pandemic?

Methods

We have analyzed questionnaire data of 575 patients, among them 171 head neck cancer patients. 246+84 questionnaires were filled in May 2020 (wave 1) and 158+87 questionannaires were filled in October 2020 (wave 2). We asked for alcohol consumption (5-point Likert scale), sportive activities, meditation, praying, and drug abuse (all 4-point Likert scale). We compared each item at both time points (t-test, 2 fold, inhomogenous variance). Sub-analysis were performed for head and neck cancer patients.

Results

Comparing between both time points, we see a stable alcohol consumption (1.700±1.463 vs. 1.66±1.428), a significant decreased in sportive activities (1.789±1.013 vs. 1.557±0.995, p=0.013), a trend to less meditation (0,571±0.951 vs. 0.408±0.873, p=0.056), a significant decrease in praying (0.938±1.225 vs. 0.650±1.126, p=0.009) and an unchanged drug abuse (0.366±0.891 vs. 0.392±0.942). Comparing head neck cancer patients with cancer patients of other tumor localizations, they show a significant stronger reduction of praying (p=0.002). During wave 2 head neck cancer patients reported about more alcohol consumption (1.473±1.491 versus 1.697±1.427) and drug abuse (0.333±0.875 versus 0.48±1.044).

Conclusions

During pandemic we see a reduction of individual coping strategies and changes in physical and mental health behavior. Societal activities are necessary to encourage coping strategies as sports or spiritual care.

Clinical trial identification

Editorial acknowledgement

Legal entity responsible for the study

Academic study group \"Spirituality in Oncology\", Deutsche Krebsgesellschaft.

Funding

Has not received any funding.

Disclosure

All authors have declared no conflicts of interest.

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