Multimorbidity and breast cancer.

Karen Meneses, Rachel Benz, Andres Azuero, Rita Jablonski-Jaudon, Patrick McNees
Author Information

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: To examine the significance of multimorbidity in breast cancer survivors, to explore multimorbidity in treatment decisions, and survivorship, and to consider multimorbidity assessment in clinical practice.
DATA SOURCES: Literature review; clinical practice guidelines.
CONCLUSION: Multimorbidity influences treatment decisions. Breast cancer survivors report greater multimorbidity compared with other cancer survivors. Multimorbidity increases with age; there may be racial and ethnic differences. Multimorbidity is associated with symptom burden, functional decline, low adherence to surveillance, and early retirement.
IMPLICATIONS FOR NURSING PRACTICE: Clinical practice guidelines do not refer to multimorbidity and patient outcomes. Comprehensive geriatric assessment combined with survivorship care plan may be considered.

Keywords

MeSH Term

Adult
Age Factors
Aged
Aged, 80 and over
Breast Neoplasms
Comorbidity
Continuity of Patient Care
Ethnicity
Female
Humans
Middle Aged
Oncology Nursing
Patient Care Planning
Practice Guidelines as Topic
Racial Groups
Risk Factors
Survivors

Word Cloud

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