Preoperative psychological profile of women with increased risk of breast cancer

Keywords: Breast cancer, BRCA1/2, risk-reducing mastectomy, quality of life, anxiety, depression, body image

Abstract

Aim: analyze depressive and anxiety symptomatology, body image and quality of life in a group of women with genetic vulnerability to breast cancer who were going to undergo a riskreducing mastectomy. Method:184 women participated in this study, all of whom had an increased risk of breast cancer, either because they were BRCA1/2 mutation carriers or because they had several affected relatives. The psychological instruments used were: Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Body Image Scale, European Organization for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality-of-Life Questionnaire Core 30 and BR23. Results: The results of this study showed that the participants presented clinical anxiety symptomatology and subclinical depressive symptomatology. However, all the sample were at normative levels in body image and quality of life. Participants with previous diagnosis of cancer showed, higher dissatisfaction with their body image, lower levels on the scales of physical, and cognitive and global functioning on quality of life, as well as higher fatigue, more general pain also in the breast and in the arm compared to women without diagnosis. Conclusions: BRCA1/2 non-mutation carriers showed more symptomatology in the breast and in the arm fatigue than BRCA1/2 mutation carriers. BRCA1/2 mutation carriers had more economic difficulties than non-carriers. It is highly recommended a psychological intervention before a risk-reducing surgery.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.
View citations

Crossmark

Metrics

Published
2022-10-21
How to Cite
Luque Suárez S. ., Olivares Crespo M. E., Olivera Pérez-Frade H. ., Brenes Sánchez J. M., López Picado A. ., de la Puente Yagüe M., Ruiz Rodríguez J. ., González Palomares B. . y Herrera de la Muela M. (2022). Preoperative psychological profile of women with increased risk of breast cancer. Psicooncología, 19(2), 255-268. https://doi.org/10.5209/psic.84039
Section
Articles