Affiliation:
1. Department of Psychological Medicine, University of Auckland, Grafton, Auckland, New Zealand
Abstract
Abstract
Background
Patients undergoing chemotherapy experience a range of aversive symptoms. These symptoms vary across individuals and at least some of this variation can be predicted by psychological factors, such as distress. However, while psychological distress predicts some of the symptoms, it is limited in important ways.
Purpose
To (a) assess the viability of disgust—a discrete emotion that specifically evolved for health-related reasons—as a predictor of chemotherapy-related symptoms (particularly, taste- and smell-related changes) and (b) compare the predictive utility of disgust sensitivity and propensity against the most commonly used affective predictor, that is, psychological distress.
Methods
Patients with cancer (N = 63) about to initiate chemotherapy were recruited in a prospective observational study. Psychosocial predictor variables were assessed at baseline, and outcomes (i.e., physical symptoms, body mass index [BMI], and food-based sensory-processing changes) were assessed at both baseline and 6 week follow-up.
Results
Psychological distress did not predict any of the outcomes. Both disgust sensitivity (β = .53, p = .003) and propensity (β = −.56, p = .002) predicted greater food-based sensory-processing changes, while disgust sensitivity marginally predicted greater chemotherapy-related physical symptoms (β = .34, p = .060); neither of these two forms of disgust predicted BMI.
Conclusions
The study provides first evidence showing (a) associations between trait disgust and food sensory-processing changes that arise during chemotherapy and (b) disgust as being a more useful predictor of food- and digestion-related symptoms than psychological distress. In doing so, it opens new doors for better care to be provided to patients undergoing chemotherapy.
Funder
University of Auckland
Cancer Society New Zealand
Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health,General Psychology
Reference72 articles.
1. Coming to your senses: Detecting taste and smell alterations in chemotherapy patients. A systematic review;Gamper;J Pain Symptom Manag.,2012
2. Side effects of chemotherapy and combined chemohormonal therapy in women with early-stage breast cancer;Partridge;J Natl Cancer Inst.,2001
3. Impact of adjuvant breast cancer chemotherapy on fatigue, other symptoms, and quality of life;Byar;Oncol Nurs Forum.,2006
4. Transition of symptoms and quality of life in cancer patients on chemotherapy;Kim;J Korean Acad Nurs.,2009
5. In lung cancer patients, age, race-ethnicity, gender and smoking predict adverse comorbidity, which in turn predicts treatment and survival;Tammemagi;J Clin Epidemiol.,2004
Cited by
3 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献