Scimex: A US study has found that providing women with the skills to manage
stress early in their breast cancer treatment can actually improve their
mood and quality of life many years later. The researchers found
patients who learned relaxation techniques and new coping skills during a
10 week support-group, experienced improved quality of life and less
depressive symptoms during the first year of treatment, compared to
women who only attended a one-day cancer education seminar.
A new study shows that providing women with skills to manage stress
early in their breast cancer treatment can improve their mood and
quality of life many years later. Published early online in CANCER, a
peer-reviewed journal of the American Cancer Society, the findings
suggest that women given the opportunity to learn stress management
techniques during treatment may benefit well into survivorship.
At the turn of the century, 240 women with a recent breast cancer
diagnosis participated in a randomized trial that tested the effects of a
stress management intervention developed by Michael Antoni, PhD, of the
University of Miami. Dr. Antoni and his team found that, compared with
patients who received a one-day seminar of education about breast
cancer, patients who learned relaxation techniques and new coping skills
in a supportive group over 10 weeks experienced improved quality of
life and less depressive symptoms during the first year of treatment.
In their latest report, the researchers found that the women who
received the stress management intervention had persistently less
depressive symptoms and better quality of life up to 15 years later.
"Women with breast cancer who participated in the study initially used
stress management techniques to cope with the challenges of primary
treatment to lower distress. Because these stress management techniques
also give women tools to cope with fears of recurrence and disease
progression, the present results indicate that these skills can be used
to reduce distress and depressed mood and optimize quality of life
across the survivorship period as women get on with their lives," said
lead author Jamie Stagl, who is currently at Massachusetts General
Hospital, in Boston.
Stagl noted that breast cancer survivors in the stress management group
reported levels of depression and quality of life at the 15-year
follow-up that were similar to what is reported by women without breast
cancer. Also, the intervention was helpful for women of various races
and ethnic backgrounds. "This is key given the fact that ethnic minority
women experience poorer quality of life and outcomes after breast
cancer treatment," said Stagl.
As survival rates increase for breast cancer, the question of how to
maintain psychosocial health becomes increasingly salient. The current
findings highlight the possibility that psychologists and social workers
may be able to "inoculate" women with stress management skills early in
treatment to help them maintain long-term psychosocial health.
"Because depressive symptoms have been associated with neuroendocrine
and inflammatory processes that may influence cancer progression, our
ongoing work is examining the effects of stress management on depression
and inflammatory biomarkers on the one hand, and disease recurrence and
survival on the other," said Dr. Antoni.