Decline in quality of life among caregivers of patients undergoing chemotherapy for incurable cancer: implications for early social and medical support
Nobumichi Takeuchi, Saiko Kurosawa, Sonomi Yoshida, Kumiko Koike

TL;DR
Caregivers of cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy experience declining quality of life, especially as treatment progresses, highlighting the need for early support.
Contribution
This study identifies factors affecting caregiver quality of life during chemotherapy and emphasizes the need for early support systems.
Findings
Caregiver emotional and cognitive functioning declined with longer treatment durations and later treatment lines.
Fatigue prevalence in caregivers reached 100% by the fourth-line treatment.
Patient symptoms, QOL, treatment duration, and caregiver demographics significantly impacted caregiver QOL.
Abstract
Recent advances in cancer treatment have extended patient survival and improved quality of life (QOL), often enabling home-based chemotherapy. However, this shift places a growing burden on informal caregivers, impacting their own well-being. This study aims to explore changes in caregiver QOL over the course of treatment and identify contributing factors. We conducted a single-institution, prospective observational study involving patients receiving chemotherapy for unresectable or recurrent solid tumors and their primary caregivers. QOL was assessed using the EORTC QLQ-C30 before each treatment line. Scores were stratified by treatment duration and line. Paired t-tests and multiple linear regression analyses were performed. Among 378 patient-caregiver pairs, caregiver emotional and cognitive functioning declined over time, particularly with longer treatment durations and later…
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Taxonomy
TopicsCancer-related cognitive impairment studies · Cancer survivorship and care · Family Support in Illness
