7 results on '"Kaste, Judith"'
Search Results
2. Clinically assessed posttraumatic stress in patients with breast cancer during the first year after diagnosis in the prospective, longitudinal, controlled COGNICARES study
- Author
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Voigt, Varinka, Neufeld, Franziska, Kaste, Judith, Bühner, Markus, Sckopke, Philipp, Wuerstlein, Rachel, Hellerhoff, Karin, SztrókayGaul, Anikó, Braun, Michael, von Koch, Franz Edler, SilvaZürcher, Eliane, Hasmüller, Stephan, Bauerfeind, Ingo, Debus, Gerlinde, Herschbach, Peter, Mahner, Sven, Harbeck, Nadia, and Hermelink, Kerstin
- Published
- 2017
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3. Psychosoziale Belastung nach der Diagnose eines Mammakarzinoms bei Müttern minderjähriger Kinder und anderen Patientinnen im Vergleich
- Author
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Kaste, Judith
- Subjects
FOS: Medical and Health Sciences - Abstract
Sowohl die Ergebnisse der bisher überwiegend qualitativ angelegten Forschungsarbeiten als auch die jüngsten Ergebnisse aus der quantitativen Forschung liefern Anhaltspunkte dafür, dass krebskranke Mütter minderjähriger Kinder einer besonderen Belastung ausgesetzt sind und dass sie demzufolge mehr Unterstützung erfahren sollten. Ergänzend zur bisherigen Forschung wurden in der hier vorliegenden Arbeit erstmals ein strukturiertes klinisches Interview (SKID; Wittchen, Zaudig & Fydrich, 1997) und ein speziell auf die Beschwerden krebskranker Patienten abgestimmter Fragebogen (FBK-R23; Herschbach, Marten-Mittag & Henrich, 2003) verwendet. Untersucht wurde zunächst die Fragestellung, ob es zum Zeitpunkt zwischen Diagnosestellung und Behandlungsbeginn einen Unterschied in der psychosozialen Belastung von Müttern minderjähriger Kinder und Frauen ohne minderjährige Kinder gibt. Darüber hinaus wird die Gruppe der Frauen mit minderjährigen Kindern genauer betrachtet. Von Interesse ist darüber hinaus, ob das Alter der Kinder oder eine bestehende Partnerschaft sich auf das Ausmaß der psychosozialen Belastung der Mütter auswirkt. Zur Beantwortung der genannten Fragestellungen wurden neben den bereits erwähnten Instrumenten SKID und FBK-R23 die Module für Panik, Angst und Depression aus dem Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-D; Löwe et al., 2002) verwendet. Die statistische Auswertung der Daten von 120 Studienteilnehmerinnen erfolgte mit dem Statistical Package for the Social Sciences (SPSS for Windows, Version 21.0). Insgesamt legen die Ergebnisse dieser Forschungsarbeit nahe, dass Mütter minderjähriger Kinder zum Zeitpunkt der Diagnosestellung nicht mehr und nicht weniger psychosozial belastet sind als Frauen ohne minderjährige Kinder. Auch das Alter der Kinder und das Bestehen einer Partnerschaft beeinflussen die psychosoziale Belastung der Mütter nicht. Die Ängste der an Krebs erkrankten Frau sollten wahrgenommen werden – ob sie nun Kinder hat oder nicht.
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Clinically assessed posttraumatic stress in patients with breast cancer during the first year after diagnosis in the prospective, longitudinal, controlled COGNICARES study
- Author
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Voigt, Varinka, primary, Neufeld, Franziska, additional, Kaste, Judith, additional, Bühner, Markus, additional, Sckopke, Philipp, additional, Wuerstlein, Rachel, additional, Hellerhoff, Karin, additional, Sztrókay-Gaul, Anikó, additional, Braun, Michael, additional, von Koch, Franz Edler, additional, Silva-Zürcher, Eliane, additional, Hasmüller, Stephan, additional, Bauerfeind, Ingo, additional, Debus, Gerlinde, additional, Herschbach, Peter, additional, Mahner, Sven, additional, Harbeck, Nadia, additional, and Hermelink, Kerstin, additional
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. Elucidating Pretreatment Cognitive Impairment in Breast Cancer Patients: The Impact of Cancer-Related Post-Traumatic Stress.
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Hermelink, Kerstin, Voigt, Varinka, Kaste, Judith, Neufeld, Franziska, Wuerstlein, Rachel, Bühner, Markus, Münzel, Karin, Rjosk-Dendorfer, Dorothea, Grandl, Susanne, Braun, Michael, von Koch, Franz Edler, Härtl, Kristin, Hasmüller, Stephan, Bauerfeind, Ingo, Debus, Gerlinde, Herschbach, Peter, and Harbeck, Nadia
- Subjects
COGNITION disorders research ,CANCER patient psychology ,POST-traumatic stress disorder ,CANCER complications ,CANCER diagnosis - Abstract
Background: Pretreatment cognitive impairment in cancer patients is well established but unexplained. Similar cognitive compromise has been observed in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients, and PTSD symptoms are a frequent concomitant of cancer diagnosis. We tested the hypothesis that pretreatment cognitive impairment is attributable to cancer-related post-traumatic stress. Methods: Women aged 65 years or younger who were diagnosed with breast cancer (case patients) or had undergone negative routine breast imaging (control patients) at one of six participating breast centers underwent traditional and computerized neuropsychological testing, clinician-administered diagnostic assessment of stress disorders, and self-report assessments of cognitive function and depression. To minimize confounding, case patients were evaluated prior to any local or systemic treatment. Cognitive indices of case patients, control patients, and normative samples were compared. The patients' risk of overall cognitive impairment was determined. Linear regression and a mediation model were used to test the study hypothesis. All statistical tests were two-sided. Results: The 166 case patients and 60 well-matched control patients showed near-identical deviations from population norms. Case patients scored worse than control patients on two of 20 cognitive indices (Go/Nogo commission errors, Go/Nogo omission errors). Self-reported cognitive problems were associated with Go/Nogo omission errors and more pronounced in case patients. Only PTSD symptoms (Beta = 0.27, P = .004) and age (Beta = 0.22, P = .04) statistically significantly predicted Go/Nogo errors. The effect of having cancer on Go/Nogo errors was mediated by PTSD symptoms. Case patients did not have an increased risk of overall cognitive impairment. Conclusion: Prior to any treatment, breast cancer patients may show limited cognitive impairment that is apparently largely caused by cancer-related post-traumatic stress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2015
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6. Chemotherapy and Post-traumatic Stress in the Causation of Cognitive Dysfunction in Breast Cancer Patients.
- Author
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Hermelink K, Bühner M, Sckopke P, Neufeld F, Kaste J, Voigt V, Münzel K, Wuerstlein R, Ditsch N, Hellerhoff K, Rjosk-Dendorfer D, Braun M, von Koch FE, Härtl K, Hasmüller S, Bauerfeind I, Debus G, Herschbach P, Mahner S, and Harbeck N
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Breast Neoplasms complications, Breast Neoplasms epidemiology, Case-Control Studies, Cognition physiology, Female, Humans, Longitudinal Studies, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic epidemiology, Young Adult, Antineoplastic Combined Chemotherapy Protocols therapeutic use, Breast Neoplasms drug therapy, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Cognition drug effects, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic complications
- Abstract
Background: Cancer-related cognitive dysfunction has mostly been attributed to chemotherapy; this explanation, however, fails to account for cognitive dysfunction observed in chemotherapy-naïve patients. In a controlled, longitudinal, multisite study, we tested the hypothesis that cognitive function in breast cancer patients is affected by cancer-related post-traumatic stress., Methods: Newly diagnosed breast cancer patients and healthy control subjects, age 65 or younger, underwent three assessments within one year, including paper-and-pencil and computerized neuropsychological tests, clinical diagnostics of post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), and self-reported cognitive function. Analysis of variance was used to compare three groups of participants-patients who did or did not receive chemotherapy and healthy control subjects-on age- and education-corrected cognitive performance and cognitive change. Differences that were statistically significant after correction for false discovery rate were investigated with linear mixed-effects models and mediation models. All statistical tests were two-sided., Results: Of 226 participants (166 patients and 60 control subjects), 206 completed all assessment sessions (attrition: 8.8%). Patients demonstrated overall cognitive decline (group*time effect on composite z -score: -0.13, P = .04) and scored consistently worse on Go/Nogo errors. The latter effect was mediated by PTSD symptoms (mediation effect: B = 0.15, 95% confidence interval = 0.02 to 0.38). Only chemotherapy patients showed declined reaction time on a computerized alertness test. Overall cognitive performance correlated with self-reported cognitive problems at one year ( T = -0.11, P = .02)., Conclusions: Largely irrespective of chemotherapy, breast cancer patients may encounter very subtle cognitive dysfunction, part of which is mediated by cancer-related post-traumatic stress. Further factors other than treatment side effects remain to be investigated., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2017
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. Elucidating pretreatment cognitive impairment in breast cancer patients: the impact of cancer-related post-traumatic stress.
- Author
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Hermelink K, Voigt V, Kaste J, Neufeld F, Wuerstlein R, Bühner M, Münzel K, Rjosk-Dendorfer D, Grandl S, Braun M, von Koch FE, Härtl K, Hasmüller S, Bauerfeind I, Debus G, Herschbach P, and Harbeck N
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, Case-Control Studies, Depression etiology, Female, Humans, Linear Models, Middle Aged, Neuropsychological Tests, Prospective Studies, Risk Assessment, Risk Factors, Self Report, Stress Disorders, Post-Traumatic etiology, Stress, Psychological complications, Breast Neoplasms psychology, Breast Neoplasms therapy, Cognition, Cognitive Dysfunction diagnosis, Cognitive Dysfunction etiology, Stress, Psychological etiology
- Abstract
Background: Pretreatment cognitive impairment in cancer patients is well established but unexplained. Similar cognitive compromise has been observed in post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) patients, and PTSD symptoms are a frequent concomitant of cancer diagnosis. We tested the hypothesis that pretreatment cognitive impairment is attributable to cancer-related post-traumatic stress., Methods: Women aged 65 years or younger who were diagnosed with breast cancer (case patients) or had undergone negative routine breast imaging (control patients) at one of six participating breast centers underwent traditional and computerized neuropsychological testing, clinician-administered diagnostic assessment of stress disorders, and self-report assessments of cognitive function and depression. To minimize confounding, case patients were evaluated prior to any local or systemic treatment. Cognitive indices of case patients, control patients, and normative samples were compared. The patients' risk of overall cognitive impairment was determined. Linear regression and a mediation model were used to test the study hypothesis. All statistical tests were two-sided., Results: The 166 case patients and 60 well-matched control patients showed near-identical deviations from population norms. Case patients scored worse than control patients on two of 20 cognitive indices (Go/Nogo commission errors, Go/Nogo omission errors). Self-reported cognitive problems were associated with Go/Nogo omission errors and more pronounced in case patients. Only PTSD symptoms (Beta = 0.27, P = .004) and age (Beta = 0.22, P = .04) statistically significantly predicted Go/Nogo errors. The effect of having cancer on Go/Nogo errors was mediated by PTSD symptoms. Case patients did not have an increased risk of overall cognitive impairment., Conclusion: Prior to any treatment, breast cancer patients may show limited cognitive impairment that is apparently largely caused by cancer-related post-traumatic stress., (© The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oup.com.)
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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