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Recovery and Rehabilitation After Lung Cancer Surgery

University of Oslo (UIO) logo

University of Oslo (UIO)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Lung Cancer
Depression
Fatigue
Pain
Breathlessness

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT01399541
59081001

Details and patient eligibility

About

The specific aims of this translational, interdisciplinary, multi-center, international research study with 300 Lung cancer patients are to:

Aim 1 Explore how the patients experience the transfer between different locations and between different levels of care at the same location and how they experienced coming home.

Aim 2 Explore lung cancer patients' symptoms, symptom clusters, and changes in symptoms and symptom clusters over time.

Aim 3 Explore interaction between lung cancers patients' symptoms, symptom clusters, health related quality of life and social support.

Full description

Approximately 2500 patients are diagnosed with lung cancer annually i Norway, and approximately 400 of these undergo surgery. Many patients report that life after lung cancer surgery is difficult. After surgery, the patients are frequently transferred to a local hospital or to another level of care at the hospital where they were operated. The transfer is critical for patients' safety because communication failure is one of the most common causes of medical error.

Studies that have analyzed the quality of life of lung cancer patients after surgery reach different conclusions about the patients' Quality of life (QOL), some studies state that lung cancer patients are back to normal quality of life after 9 months, while others indicate that the patients still have reduced QOL two years after surgery. It is difficult to assess the reason for the differences in results as most of the studies used the same QOL questionnaire. Studies that have evaluated the social support that lung cancer patients receive indicate that lung cancer patients receive less support than other cancer patients.

Lung cancer patients have a wide range of physical problems (fatigue, dyspnea, coughing and pain) and psychological (depression) problems following surgery.

Based on findings from this literature review a need exist for improved postoperative follow-up of patients after surgery for lung cancer The proposed study will evaluate the social support, the levels of lung cancer stigma, symptoms and changes in this over time as well as evaluate patient experience with transfer in the immediate postoperative period.

Enrollment

300 patients

Sex

All

Ages

18+ years old

Volunteers

No Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • patients with lung cancer patients above the age of 18 that have been treated with surgery, who are able to speak and understand Norwegian,

Exclusion criteria

  • and who suffer no cognitive impairment.

Trial design

300 participants in 1 patient group

Under and over 65 years

Trial contacts and locations

4

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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