Mental distress and need for psychosocial support in prostate cancer patients: An observational cross-sectional study

  • Naomi Baba (Shared first author)
  • Theresa Schrage (Shared first author)
  • Armin Hartmann
  • Kenji Baba
  • Alexander Wuensch
  • Wolfgang Schultze-Seemann
  • Joachim Weis (Shared last author)
  • Andreas Joos (Shared last author)

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: Prostate cancer is the most common cancer in German men and associated with various physical and psychosocial problems. This study investigated the association between mental distress and the subjective need for psychosocial support comparing subgroups of patients with different treatments and disease stages.

METHOD: We performed an observational, cross-sectional study including patients with four medical conditions: Active Surveillance, radical prostatectomy, biochemical relapse, metastasized disease. Mental distress (NCCN Distress-Thermometer), symptoms of depression and anxiety (PHQ-9, GAD-7), psychosocial needs and coping resources (self-designed questionnaire) were assessed.

RESULTS: N = 130 patients were included. 33.3% showed distress, 16.5% symptoms of moderate depression and 13% symptoms of moderate anxiety. We found no significant differences between the four groups. An association was present between distress and wish for psychosocial support (χ2 = 4.3; p < 0.05; ϕ = 0.19). Almost 90% lived with a partner, which represents a resource.

CONCLUSIONS: Prostate cancer patients showed low levels of mental distress, depression and anxiety with no difference in terms of disease stage and treatment modality. Therefore, careful psychosocial screening of all patients is essential to identify those in need for support. Distressed patients express a need for psychosocial support more often. Interpersonal relationships, most often wives and children, represent important coping resources.

Bibliographical data

Original languageEnglish
ISSN0091-2174
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 01.2021
Externally publishedYes
PubMed 32597270