Background
Anxiety, depression, insomnia, fatigue, and pain are frequently reported by cancer patients. These symptoms are highly interrelated. However, few prospective studies have documented the sequence with which symptoms occur during cancer care.
Purpose
This longitudinal study explored the temporal relationships between anxiety, depression, insomnia, fatigue, and pain over an 18-month period in a large population-based sample of nonmetastatic cancer patients (N = 828), using structural equation modeling.
Methods
The patients completed a battery of self-report scales at baseline and 2, 6, 10, 14, and 18 months later.
Results
The relationships between the same symptom at two consecutive assessments showed the highest coefficients (β = 0.29 to 0.78; all ps ≤ 0.05). Cross-loading parameters (β = 0.06 to 0.19; ps ≤ 0.05) revealed that fatigue frequently predicted subsequent depression, insomnia, and pain, whereas anxiety predicted insomnia.
Conclusions
Fatigue and anxiety appear to constitute important risk factors of other cancer-related symptoms and should be managed appropriately early during the cancer care trajectory.