The impact of chemo-induced menopause on the quality of life of young women with non-metastatic breast cancer in Algeria Original article

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Imene Bedhrani
Sidi Mousa Nesrine
Samuel Mulondo

Abstract

Background: Breast cancer is the most common cancer in females worldwide. Young women with breast cancer are treated with chemotherapy, which may exhibit gonadotoxicity thus inducing chemo- induced menopause with a risk of deterioration in their quality of life.


Method: A prospective study first of its kind in Algeria was carried out on 57 patients aged between 30 and 49 years that went for consultation at the oncology department of Pierre and Marie Curie Medical Centre Algiers. The medical files obtained and criteria of questionnaires: Quality of Life Questionnaire for Breast Cancer (QLQ-BR23) and the Quality of Life Questionnaire-Core 30 (QLQ-C30) were used to assess the quality of life in patients.


Results: From the medical files, patients had a dominant histological type of invasive ductal carcinoma at 96% and Scarff-Bloom-Richardson (SBR) II grade and luminal B profile were the most frequent. The (QLQ-C30) having averages of global health status, symptom score, and functional score with 56.34, 63.7, and 45.75 respectively. QLQ-BR23 having averages for symptom, functional score of 61.6 and 49.71 respectively.


Conclusion: Chemotherapy induces gonadotoxicity, which results in chemo-induced menopause that has a negative impact on the quality of life of young women. QLQ-BR23 is more suitable than QLQ-C30 to access the context of this study.

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How to Cite
1.
Bedhrani I, Nesrine SM, Mulondo S. The impact of chemo-induced menopause on the quality of life of young women with non-metastatic breast cancer in Algeria. OncoReview [Internet]. 2023Jan.24 [cited 2024Mar.29];12(4(48):69-4. Available from: https://journalsmededu.pl/index.php/OncoReview/article/view/2690
Section
QUALITY OF LIFE IN ONCOLOGY

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