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Original Articles

Fatigued breast cancer survivors: The role of sleep quality, depressed mood, stage and age

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Pages 965-980 | Received 22 Jun 2006, Accepted 18 Oct 2007, Published online: 18 Sep 2009
 

Abstract

Cancer-related fatigue is associated with lower health-related quality of life and the majority of breast cancer survivors experience persistent fatigue after finishing treatment. The present study examines age, cancer stage, sleep quality and depressed mood as predictors of five dimensions of fatigue in 70 fatigued breast cancer survivors who no longer evidenced any signs of cancer and were finished with treatment. Discriminant function analyses were used to predict fatigue subgroup membership (higher, lower) from age, stage, mood and sleep for five subtypes: General, Mental, Emotional, and Physical fatigue, and Vigour. Significant discriminant functions were found for all subtypes. Findings suggest that age, staging, mood and sleep are all important predictors, but there are differential relationships when subtypes of fatigue are considered. Given current limitations in treating fatigue directly, interventions targeting mood and sleep should be considered as alternate approaches to reduce fatigue.

Acknowledgement

The research was funded by the Moores UCSD Cancer Center Foundation Grant 05397A and R25 CA 65745.

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