Correlates of supportive care needs among Asian Americans with colorectal, liver, or lung cancer from a web‐based patient navigation portal intervention: The Patient COUNTS study

Author:

Wang Katarina12ORCID,Chu Janet N.13,Oh Debora L.2ORCID,Shariff‐Marco Salma24ORCID,Allen Laura2,Kuo Mei‐Chin2,Wong Ching134,Bui Hoan13,Chen Junlin3,Li Feng Ming15,Ma Carmen15ORCID,Truong Angeline1,Gomez Scarlett L.24ORCID,Nguyen Tung T.134,Tsoh Janice Y.145ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Asian American Research Center on Health, University of California San Francisco

2. Department of Epidemiology & Biostatistics University of California San Francisco

3. Division of General Internal Medicine University of California San Francisco

4. Helen Diller Family Comprehensive Cancer Center, University of California San Francisco

5. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences University of California San Francisco

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundCancer is the leading cause of death among Asian Americans, who often face barriers to cancer care. Cancer supportive care needs among Asian Americans remain understudied.AimsWe examined cancer supportive care needs and participant factors correlated with these needs, identified profiles of supportive care needs, and examined whether needs profiles are associated with quality of life among Asian American adults.Methods and ResultsWe recruited 47 Asian American adults with colorectal, liver, or lung cancer who spoke Chinese, English, or Vietnamese, and were starting or undergoing cancer treatment. We assessed cancer supportive care needs in four domains: cancer information, daily living, behavioral health, and language assistance. Hierarchical cluster analysis was used to identify clusters of participants based on their supportive need profiles to further examine the association between need profiles and quality of life (QoL) assessed by the Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy.Participants (mean age = 57.6) included 72% males and 62% spoke English less than very well. Older participants (age ≥ 65) and those with annual income <$50K reported higher daily living needs. Men and younger participants (age < 50) reported higher behavioral health needs. We found three clusters displaying distinct cancer supportive need profiles: Cluster 1 (28% of the sample) displayed high needs across all domains; Cluster 2 (51%) had low needs across all domains; and Cluster 3 (21%) had high needs for cancer information and daily living. Cluster 1 participants reported the lowest QoL.ConclusionCancer supportive care needs among Asian American patients with colorectal, liver, and lung cancer were associated with patient characteristics and QoL. Understanding cancer supportive care needs will inform future interventions to improve care and QoL for Asian American patients with cancer. ClinicalTrials.gov Identifier: NCT03867916.

Funder

Bristol Myers Squibb Foundation

National Cancer Institute

National Institutes of Health

Publisher

Wiley

Reference44 articles.

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