Although quality of life (QoL) has become an important aspect of cancer rehabilitation, psychometric studies on thyroid cancer patients are rare. We performed a case-controlled study on QoL in patients with differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC). QoL was evaluated in 61 patients with a history of DTC diagnosed from < 1 to 23 yr earlier. An undetectable thyroglobulin (Tg) level after recombinant human TSH (rhTSH) testing was considered the best predictor of cure. QoL was evaluated by means of a general psychiatric interview, the self-rating Kellner Symptoms Questionnaire (KSQ) and the Hamilton Depression Scale (HDS). QoL was also evaluated in a control group of subjects on L-T4 therapy with a non-toxic multinodular goiter diagnosed from < 1 to 25 yr earlier. DTC and control subjects were similar in age, male-female distribution and concomitant psychiatric therapies. Per-week dosage of L-T4 was higher in DTC patients than in controls (p < 0.01). In neither group of subjects was there any correlation between current TSH levels or interval from diagnosis and KSQ or HDS scores. Only in DTC patients was there a positive correlation between age and KSQ (p < 0.05) or HDS (p < 0.01) scores. There was a significant difference in overall KSQ scores between DTC (33.4 +/- 2.1) and control (24.5 +/- 1.9; p < 0.01) subjects. The subscales of KSQ showed a significant inter-group difference. HDS scores were higher in DTC subjects (35.8 +/- 1.0) than in controls (30.0 +/- 1.1; p < 0.01). HDS score was significantly (p = 0.02) higher in female than in male DTC patients. In patients with papillary carcinoma there was a positive correlation between the MACIS (metastases, age, completeness, invasiveness, size) score and KSQ (p = 0.01) or HDS (p < 0.01) scores. After rhTSH testing, detectable Tg levels were found in 13% of DTC patients. In Tg-positive patients, KSQ and HDS scores were not different from those of Tg-negative patients. After an 8-14 month period, a significant decrease in the KSQ scale somatization (p = 0.02) was found in a sub-set of 31 DTC patients. In conclusion, even in the age of rhTSH testing, DTC patients suffer an impairment of their QoL, as noted when short-term L-T4 withdrawal was the gold standard. Longitudinal evaluation seems to indicate a slight improvement in QoL when safe rhTSH testing is extensively used in the management of the disease.
The data demonstrate that low rh-GH dosages significantly improve psychological profiles as rated by HDS evaluation in adult-onset patients with GHD. On the other hand, a 6-month period of treatment does not produce any significant differences in quality of life as measured by KSQ between treated patients and placebo controls.
Differentiated thyroid carcinoma (DTC) generally has a favorable outcome. Thyroid disease, treatments, stress, and comorbidity can compromise health-related quality of life (QoL) and indirectly weigh upon the outcome. From 2004 to 2008, we evaluated QoL longitudinally in 128 DTC subjects. During scheduled examinations, subjects were asked to undergo a semi-structured psychiatric interview and five rated inventories. The same examination was conducted in 219 subjects after surgery for benign thyroid pathology. Low scores represent a better QoL. DTC and control subjects were similar in terms of age, male/female ratio, concomitant psychopharmacological treatments, and frequency of psychiatric diseases. In DTC subjects, Billewicz scale (BS) scores showed an increasing trend over time, especially among females. The ad hoc thyroid questionnaire (TQ) scores were similar in both groups and did not change over time, but at the end of the study ad hoc TQ and BS were significantly related. Ad hoc TQ scores were also related to age on entry to the study. In both male and female DTC subjects, Hamilton's tests for anxiety (HAM-A), but not for depression (HAM-D), showed an improving trend. At the end of the study, HAM-A and HAM-D scores were comparable to those of the control group. HAM-A and HAM-D were both positively correlated with the stage of cancer and the time between diagnosis and treatment. Only HAM-D correlated with age on entry to the study. Kellner symptom questionnaire (KSQ) item scores were higher in DTC subjects than in controls. The change over time in the items including anxiety, somatization, depression, and hostility was significant. Somatization and hostility were more significantly reduced in DTC females than in DTC males. Hostility scores were significantly lower in DTC subjects than in controls at the end of the study. Somatization and depression were significantly related to staging on diagnosis and age on entry to the study. Our study confirms a wide variation of illness perception in DTC subjects, which is generally unrelated to the favorable clinical follow-up of the disease. Psychological evaluation during long-term follow-up improved QoL scores, which reached the same levels noted in subjects with a history of thyroid surgery for benign thyroid pathology. Our data indicate that special attention should be paid to QoL in older DTC subjects and those with more severe staging on diagnosis.
The need to treat the acute onset of anorexia nervosa in a specialty unit is well known, but nevertheless, even "clinically recovered" patients show a high rate of relapse. The aim of our study was to re-evaluate various clinical (hemoglobin, transferrin, insulin-like growth factor I, TSH, PRL, gonadotropins and 17 beta-estradiol) and psychiatric [semistructured interview, Eating Disorder Inventory (EDI) Test] parameters in 19 female anorexic patients hospitalized in our department from 1983 to 1993 (with a 9-year median prior to the present study) for the treatment of anorexia nervosa, and to compare these results with those of a previous follow-up performed on the same subjects in 1993. In the present evaluation, no significant variation was found among the clinical, nutritional and hormonal parameters when compared to those of the first follow-up in which all parameters had improved with the exception of the PRL levels, which were significantly low. Meanwhile, the percentage of patients with spontaneous menses increased significantly from 50% to 70%, while the number of patients on psychopharmacological therapy decreased significantly throughout the study. Furthermore the percentage of patients with altered (severe or mild) EDI profiles decreased to 50%. This study emphasizes the positive prognostic role of hospitalization and intensive care in a cohort of anorexic patients. The present study, in addition to demonstrating both a general maintenance of body weight acquired over the years, albeit in the lower normal range, and an increase in the percentage of patients with a regular menstrual cycle, also highlights the persistence of psychiatric abnormalities in a large number of patients, even in those diagnosed as "clinically recovered", thus suggesting the need for long-term psychiatric care.
evaluation, almost the same trend was experienced, in addition to a higher specificity in CDT2. Our data lead us to conclude that the use of different clock timepoints in CDT1 and CDT2 does not give rise to major differences, but we cannot exclude the possibility that other time points might be more sensitive and specific.In conclusion, the findings that emerged from the two examined settings support the conception that the result of the CDT test does not appear to depend on the positions of the hand, and additionally suggest that the semiquantitative evaluation method is as sensitive as the quantitative method. ReferencesFolstein MF, Folstein SE, Mchugh PR. 1975. 'Mini-Mental State'. A practical method for grading the cognitive state of patients for the clinician. J Psychiatr Res 12: 189-198. Kálmán J, Magló czky E, Janka Z. 1995. Ó ra Rajzolási Teszt: Gyors és egyszerű demencia szűrőmó dszer. Psychiatr Hung 1: 11-18. Manos PJ, Wu R. 1994. The ten point clock test: a quick screen and grading method for cognitive impairment in medical and surgical patients. JT Int J Psychiatry Med 24: 229-244. Shulman KI, Shedletsky R, Silver IL. 1986. The challenge of time: clock drawing and cognitive function in the elderly. Int J Geriatr Psychiary 1: 135-140. Wolf-Klein GP, Silverstone FA, Levy AP, Brod M. 1989. Screening for Alzheimer's disease by clock drawing. J Am Geriatr Soc 37: 730-734.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.
customersupport@researchsolutions.com
10624 S. Eastern Ave., Ste. A-614
Henderson, NV 89052, USA
This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.
Copyright © 2024 scite LLC. All rights reserved.
Made with 💙 for researchers
Part of the Research Solutions Family.