Relating to the Body Under Chronic Cancer Threat: Implications for Psychosocial Health Among Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer Predisposition Syndromes
Relating to the Body Under Chronic Cancer Threat: Implications for Psychosocial Health Among Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer Predisposition Syndromes

Relating to the Body Under Chronic Cancer Threat: Implications for Psychosocial Health Among Adolescents and Young Adults with Cancer Predisposition Syndromes

J Adolesc Young Adult Oncol. 2024 Sep 27. doi: 10.1089/jayao.2024.0103. Online ahead of print.

ABSTRACT

Purpose: Adolescents and young adults (AYAs) with cancer predisposition syndromes often experience significant physical and psychosocial burdens. These burdens include cancer worry and potentially distressing bodily changes due to risk-reducing procedures (e.g., mastectomy) or cancer treatments. This qualitative-descriptive study explored how AYAs with Li-Fraumeni syndrome (LFS) relate and adjust to their bodies under the chronic threat of cancer. Methods: Participants were enrolled in the National Cancer Institute’s LFS study. This analysis included 42 AYAs with LFS aged 15-39 years at enrollment who completed one or two telephone interviews that explored LFS-related bodily experiences and challenges. Transcripts were thematically analyzed. Results: The majority of participants (n = 26/42, 62%) had ≥1 primary cancer. The mean age at first cancer diagnosis was 21 years (range = 0.5-35 years). Participants described challenges relating to the body due to frequent self-monitoring, whole-body magnetic resonance imaging scans, risk-reducing surgeries, and/or cancer treatments. Heightened body awareness and vigilance not only prompted self-protective behaviors but also triggered worry and distress. AYAs coped with bodily changes and concerns by seeking doctors’ reassurance, engaging in health-protective behaviors, and reframing perceptions of their altered bodies. Conclusion: Findings suggest AYAs with cancer predisposition syndromes such as LFS experience difficulties relating and adjusting to the body that may compromise psychosocial health. Our results demonstrate that these difficulties may arise across the time course of genetic disease, including before a cancer diagnosis. Clinicians might support AYAs by conducting routine psychosocial risk assessments, providing anticipatory guidance regarding body-related challenges, sharing peer support resources, and referring to mental health providers, as needed.

PMID:39331584 | DOI:10.1089/jayao.2024.0103