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Unintentional weight loss after head and neck cancer : a dynamic relationship with depressive symptoms

Although unintentional weight loss (UWL) and depressive symptoms are critical outcomes following diagnosis and treatment for head and neck cancer (HNC), there is a limited understanding of how they influence one another over time. As part of a large, prospective study on HNC outcomes, growth curve modeling was used to evaluate 564 patients’ trajectories of depressive symptoms and percentage UWL and analyze longitudinal associations between these variables across the first year following HNC diagnosis. The hypothesized temporal precedence model was not supported—pretreatment depressive symptoms predicted neither total percentage weight loss at 6 months (t(561) = -1.50, p = .13), nor rates of curvilinear change in percentage weight loss over time (t(561) = 1.38, p = .17). The opposite temporal precedence model also lacked support—early weight loss predicted neither level of depressive symptoms at 6 months (t (432) = 0.24, p = .81), nor rates of linear change in depressive symptoms over time (t (432) = 1.31, p = .19). Instead, a pattern of concurrent covariation emerged—changes in depressive symptoms over time were associated with concurrent changes in UWL (t (1148) = 2.05, p = .041) and changes in UWL over time were associated with concurrent changes in depressive symptoms (t (556) = 2.43, p = .015). That is, to the extent that depressive symptoms increased on a monthly basis, patients lost incrementally more weight than was lost due to the passage of time, and to the extent that weight loss increased on a monthly basis, depressive symptoms also increased.
Together, these bidirectional results depicted an ongoing transactional interplay between depressive symptoms and UWL across time, such that changes in either variable resulted in deviations from the average trajectory of the other variable. Patient-reported pain and eating abilities emerged as potential mechanisms through which these variables influence one another. The results have important clinical implications, indicating that ongoing screening and treatment for depression and weight loss throughout the first year after HNC could benefit patients’ psychological and nutritional outcomes alike.

Identiferoai:union.ndltd.org:uiowa.edu/oai:ir.uiowa.edu:etd-6622
Date01 July 2016
CreatorsVan Liew, Julia Rose
ContributorsChristensen, Alan J.
PublisherUniversity of Iowa
Source SetsUniversity of Iowa
LanguageEnglish
Detected LanguageEnglish
Typedissertation
Formatapplication/pdf
SourceTheses and Dissertations
RightsCopyright 2016 Julia Rose Van Liew

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