Abstract
Purpose
Limb amputation is a life-altering procedure used to treat certain cancer patients. The influence of psychosocial factors (such as marital status) on outcomes is poorly understood, hindering the development of targeted resources for the specific needs of these patients. This study was conducted to characterize the influence of marital status on survival after cancer-related amputation.
Design/Research Approach
Retrospective cohort study.
Sample
1,516 patients with cancer-related amputation were studied from the Surveillance, Epidemiology and End Results database.
Methods
Patients were grouped by marital status as single, married or divorced/separated/widowed and survival was compared using multivariate cox regression adjusted for demographic, tumor and treatment factors.
Findings
Adjusted analysis showed that single (HR, 1.213; p = .044) patients had a significantly higher overall mortality-risk, while divorced/separated/widowed patients had both a significantly higher overall (HR, 1.397; p < .001) and cause-specific mortality-risk (HR, 1.381; p = .003) compared to married patients.
Conclusion
We posit that the increased psychosocial support available to married cancer patients may play a key role in improving survival.
Implications for Psychosocial Providers
These findings provide new insight about the psychosocial needs of cancer amputees and the prognostic implications for those lacking social support of a spouse.
Acknowledgements
We would like to thank the National Cancer Institute for its establishment of the SEER program as means to promote cancer research—Surveillance Research Program, National Cancer Institute SEER*Stat software (seer.cancer.gov/seerstat) version 8.3.5.
Data availability statement
The data that support the findings of this study are openly available within the Surveillance Epidemiology and End Results (SEER) database at http://seer.cancer.gov/. The Registry of Research Data Repositories persistent identifier for this resource is RRID: nif-0000-21366. The data can be extracted via case listing session from the dataset titled: Incidence—SEER 18 Regs Research Data + Hurricane Katrina Impacted Louisiana Cases, Nov 2017 Sub (1973–2015 varying). This is cited as reference number 19 within the manuscript.
Disclosure statement
The authors of this study have not received grant support or research funding and do not have any proprietary interests in the materials described in this article.
Patient consent statement
This study was conducted using de-identified data contained in a publicly accessible national cancer database registry. For this type of study, participant written informed consent was not required.