Emotional well-being doesn't affect cancer outcome
NEW YORK (Reuters Health) - The results of a new study provide no evidence to support the notion that patients with cancer can influence the course or outcome of their cancer by making changes to improve their emotional well-being or, in particular, that psychotherapy can help them live longer.
Of 1,093 head and neck cancer patients who provided information on their emotional health during their cancer treatment, Dr. James C. Coyne of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia and colleagues found that emotional well-being was not a predictor of survival.
Altogether, 646 patients died during the 1992-2000 study and emotional status was not related to survival, even after adjusting for several other factors like gender, characteristics or stage of the tumor, the team reports in the journal Cancer.
Emotional status "neither directly affected progression or death nor functioned as a lurking variable," Coyne and colleagues report.
Based on this study and the published literature, credible evidence that cancer patients' participation in psychotherapy or support groups prolongs their lives is lacking, they note.
(Continued here.)
Of 1,093 head and neck cancer patients who provided information on their emotional health during their cancer treatment, Dr. James C. Coyne of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia and colleagues found that emotional well-being was not a predictor of survival.
Altogether, 646 patients died during the 1992-2000 study and emotional status was not related to survival, even after adjusting for several other factors like gender, characteristics or stage of the tumor, the team reports in the journal Cancer.
Emotional status "neither directly affected progression or death nor functioned as a lurking variable," Coyne and colleagues report.
Based on this study and the published literature, credible evidence that cancer patients' participation in psychotherapy or support groups prolongs their lives is lacking, they note.
(Continued here.)
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