Smoking and other health factors in patients with head and neck cancer

Kristen McCarter, Amanda L. Baker, Luke Wolfenden, Chris Wratten, Judith Bauer, Alison K. Beck, Erin Forbes, Gregory Carter, Lucy Leigh, Christopher Oldmeadow, Ben Britton

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

4 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Background: Information on smoking and other health factors in head and neck cancer (HNC) patients throughout treatment, follow-up and survivorship is limited. This study explores patterns of multiple health factors during radiotherapy (RT) and naturalistic long-term follow-up in a convenience sample of patients with HNC. Methods: Smoking, alcohol use and depression were measured at baseline, 4 and 12 weeks post RT for a sub-group of 99 patients who participated in a randomised controlled trial and completed long-term follow-up. These factors plus healthy eating, physical activity and fatigue are also reported from the long-term follow-up component. Smoking was measured by self-report and biochemically, whilst all other variables were by self-report. Where variables were assessed at multiple time points logistic mixed effects regression models determined within-person changes over time. Results: There were important discrepancies between self-reported (4–7%) and biochemically verified (13–29%) rates of smoking. Rates of smoking and hazardous alcohol intake were significantly increased at follow-up compared to baseline. Depression rates were observed to be higher at end of RT compared to baseline. At long-term follow-up, fatigue was common and co-occurred with suboptimal healthy eating and hazardous alcohol use. Conclusion: Clinically important levels of smoking and alcohol consumption post RT in this sample suggest possible targets for intervention beyond treatment into long-term follow-up of patients.

Original languageEnglish
Article number102202
Number of pages7
JournalCancer Epidemiology
Volume79
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2022

Keywords

  • Alcohol
  • Depression
  • Diet
  • Fatigue
  • Head and neck cancer
  • Physical activity
  • Smoking
  • Tobacco

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