A study of chronic pelvic pain after radiotherapy in survivors of locally advanced cervical cancer

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Abstract

Introduction: Chronic pelvic pain (persisting pain in hips, groins or lower back) is poorly described in studies of cervical cancer survivors (CCSs). The aims of this study were to describe chronic pelvic pain and associated variables in CCSs surveyed >5 years post-radiotherapy, and to compare the presence of pain in hips and lower back in CCSs with findings in the general female population. Methods: Ninety-one CCSs treated with radiotherapy between 1994 and 1999 were in 2005 included in a cross-sectional questionnaire-based study. They were asked about demographic variables, clinical symptoms, mental distress, and quality of life (QOL). Normative data (NORM) were collected from a population-study of Norwegian females. Results: Pain in lower back and hips was significantly more prevalent (p

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Vistad, I., Cvancarova, M., Kristensen, G. B., & Fosså, S. D. (2011). A study of chronic pelvic pain after radiotherapy in survivors of locally advanced cervical cancer. Journal of Cancer Survivorship, 5(2), 208–216. https://doi.org/10.1007/s11764-011-0172-z

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