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Immune function and adjustment style: do they predict survival in breast cancer?

journal contribution
posted on 2024-11-01, 01:15 authored by R Osborne, Avni Sali, Neil Aaronson, Gerald Elsworth, Bogdan Mdzewski, Andrew Sinclair
The aim of this study was to investigate the role of immune status and psychosocial factors in survival from early breast cancer (N = 61). Baseline assessments included lymphocyte number and function, natural killer cell activity (NKA), plasma cortisol and prolactin level. Psychosocial measures included anxiety, depression and mental adjustment to cancer and social support. Length of follow-up was 6.1-7.9 years with 14 (23%) breast cancer deaths. In Cox proportional hazards models adjusting for lymph node status two parameters predicted longer survival, low NKA (HR 29 per LLU, p = 0.003) and minimizing the illness adjustment (HR 0.64 per scale point, p = 0.012). These data provide little evidence for a psychoneuroimmunological mechanism in the survival from breast cancer. While this study is limited due to small sample size, and therefore the possibility of inflated estimates, longer survival in those minimizing the illness is a finding consistent with recent studies; however, the counter-intuitive finding that high NKA predicts shorter survival may be a marker for current disease or response to treatments. Copyright (C) 2003 John Wiley Sons, Ltd.

History

Journal

Psycho-Oncology

Volume

13

Start page

199

End page

210

Total pages

12

Publisher

John Wiley and Sons

Place published

UK

Language

English

Copyright

Copyright © 2003 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

Former Identifier

2004000787

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2009-02-27

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