- Vaz-Luis, Ines;
- Di Meglio, Antonio;
- Havas, Julie;
- El-Mouhebb, Mayssam;
- Lapidari, Pietro;
- Presti, Daniele;
- Soldato, Davide;
- Pistilli, Barbara;
- Dumas, Agnes;
- Menvielle, Gwenn;
- Charles, Cecile;
- Everhard, Sibille;
- Martin, Anne-Laure;
- Cottu, Paul H;
- Lerebours, Florence;
- Coutant, Charles;
- Dauchy, Sarah;
- Delaloge, Suzette;
- Lin, Nancy U;
- Ganz, Patricia A;
- Partridge, Ann H;
- André, Fabrice;
- Michiels, Stefan
Purpose
Fatigue is recognized as one of the most burdensome and long-lasting adverse effects of cancer and cancer treatment. We aimed to characterize long-term fatigue trajectories among breast cancer survivors.Methods
We performed a detailed longitudinal analysis of fatigue using a large ongoing national prospective clinical study (CANcer TOxicity, ClinicalTrials.gov identifier: NCT01993498) of patients with stage I-III breast cancer treated from 2012 to 2015. Fatigue was assessed at diagnosis and year 1, 2, and 4 postdiagnosis. Baseline clinical, sociodemographic, behavioral, tumor-related, and treatment-related characteristics were available. Trajectories of fatigue and risk factors of trajectory-group membership were identified by iterative estimates of group-based trajectory models.Results
Three trajectory groups were identified for severe global fatigue (n = 4,173). Twenty-one percent of patients were in the high-risk group, having risk estimates of severe global fatigue of 94.8% (95% CI, 86.6 to 100.0) at diagnosis and 64.6% (95% CI, 59.2 to 70.1) at year 4; 19% of patients clustered in the deteriorating group with risk estimates of severe global fatigue of 13.8% (95% CI, 6.7 to 20.9) at diagnosis and 64.5% (95% CI, 57.3 to 71.8) at year 4; 60% were in the low-risk group with risk estimates of 3.6% (95% CI, 2.5 to 4.7) at diagnosis and 9.6% (95% CI, 7.5 to 11.7) at year 4. The distinct dimensions of fatigue clustered in different trajectory groups than those identified by severe global fatigue, being differentially affected by sociodemographic, clinical, and treatment-related factors.Conclusion
Our findings highlight the multidimensional nature of cancer-related fatigue and the complexity of its risk factors. This study helps to identify patients with increased risk of severe fatigue and to inform personalized interventions to ameliorate this problem.