Purpose: Caregivers of patients living longer with high-grade malignant glioma (HGG) have the unique challenge of caring for a person who may have cognitive impairment, along with cancer-related issues over a prolonged period of time. This study aims to detail the psychosocial profile of long-term caregivers, to describe their perceptions of the patient's quality of life and to examine predictors of their psychological distress.
Methods: Sixty-nine caregivers (48%) of eligible patients with HGG surviving over 2 years were recruited from two Australian metropolitan tertiary hospitals. Caregivers completed cross-sectional measures of psychological distress (GHQ-12), caregiver impact (FACQ-PC) and patient functional well-being (FACT-Br TOI). Correlational analyses identified factors related to caregiver psychological distress. Those of significance (p ≤ .01) were examined using multiple regression models to determine their predictive value.
Results: Caregivers were mostly female (73%), spouses (67%), cohabiting (78%) and were caring for patients surviving a median of 5.9 years since diagnosis. Whilst caregivers overall reported minimal psychological distress, 28% endorsed moderate to severe psychological distress, warranting clinical attention. Caregiver strain and low patient functional well-being both significantly predicted caregiver psychological distress (adjusted R(2) = .35, F(4, 60) = 17.7, p < .001), accounting for a moderate amount (35%) of variance. Other typical factors such as duration of caregiving, performance status, symptom burden and disease or demographic related factors were not predictive.
Conclusions: Psychological distress affects a significant proportion of caregivers of patients living longer with HGG. The presence of caregiver strain and low patient functional well-being are the most important predictors of psychological distress among this cohort of caregivers.
Keywords: Caregiver; Distress; Glioblastoma; Glioma; Quality of life; Survivor.