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Perceived stigma and its correlates among Asian patients with advanced cancer: A multi‐country APPROACH study

Irene Teo, Adithya Bhaskar, Semra Özdemir, Chetna Malhotra, Thushari Hapuarachchi, Anjum Khan Joad, Maria Fidelis Manalo, Lubna Mariam, Xiao-Hong Ning, Gayatri Palat, Rubayat Rahman, Pham Nguyen Tuong, Eric Finkelstein, the APPROACH study group

2022Psycho-Oncology24 citationsDOI

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Perceived cancer-related stigma can affect mental health and potentially treatment choices for patients with cancer. Nevertheless, perceived stigma is not very well understood in Asia. This study investigated across six developing Asian countries: (1) the prevalence of perceived stigma among advanced cancer patients, (2) its risk factors, and (3) its association with patient treatment preferences. METHODS: This cross-sectional study recruited patients receiving oncology care across major hospitals in Bangladesh, China, India, Philippines, Sri Lanka and Vietnam. Participants (N = 1358) were adults diagnosed with stage IV metastatic solid cancer who completed self-reported surveys. Multi-variable logistic regression and ordered logit models examined the associations with perceived stigma and variables of interest. RESULTS: Across the countries, 35%, 95% CI [32%, 38%] of patients reported experiencing at least one facet of cancer-related stigma often or always, while 60% [57%, 63%] reported it occurring occasionally. Top-endorsed facets of perceived stigma across the Asian countries suggest a distinct pattern. Having knowingly engaged in health-risk behaviours (OR = 2.03-2.24, 95% CI [1.14-1.19, 3.43-4.41]), unemployment (2.64 [1.67, 4.19]) and body image change (1.57 [1.00, 2.45]) were associated with higher odds of perceived stigma, while time mitigated perceived stigma (0.49-0.65 [0.30-0.45, 0.76-0.92]). Perceived stigma was associated with lower odds of preference for life-extending treatments, although the associations did not hold up in the adjusted model. CONCLUSIONS: Perceived stigma is unique among Asian advanced cancer patients. Stigma is important to assess and address, taking into consideration the various sociodemographic, clinical and psychological factors of cancer patients.

Topics & Concepts

Stigma (botany)Odds ratioMedicineLogistic regressionCross-sectional studySocial stigmaAffect (linguistics)Clinical psychologyOddsDemographyPsychologyPsychiatryFamily medicineInternal medicinePathologyCommunicationHuman immunodeficiency virus (HIV)SociologyCancer survivorship and careMental Health Treatment and AccessGlobal Cancer Incidence and Screening