Background: Women with breast cancer frequently undergo menopause following adjuvant chemotherapy. Here, we investigated whether they have more severe symptoms than women undergoing natural menopause. Patients and methods: Forty-one women who had undergone menopause as a result of chemotherapy and 57 healthy women who had undergone recent natural menopause were evaluated on two occasions 1 year apart. The primary end point was the summed score of the self-report Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy, endocrine symptoms (FACT-ES) scale. Quality of life was evaluated by the FACT-G questionnaire and fatigue by the FACT-F subscale. Results: There was a strong trend for patients to report worse FACT-ES scores than controls at the first (P = 0.05) and second (P = 0.04) time points. More patients had moderate/severe hot flashes than controls undergoing natural menopause (51% versus 19%, P = 0.003). Patients reported worse fatigue than controls at the first assessment (P = 0.04), with no difference at the second. Menopausal symptoms were associated with fatigue for both groups. There was no difference between patients and controls in the quality-of-life scale, although assessment of patients is likely subject to adaptation and response-shift bias. Conclusions: Women undergoing chemotherapy-induced menopause may experience worse symptoms than women undergoing natural menopause. © The Author 2009. Published by Oxford University Press.
CITATION STYLE
Mar Fan, H. G., Houédé-Tchen, N., Chemerynsky, I., Yi, Q. L., Xu, W., Harvey, B., & Tannock, I. F. (2009). Menopausal symptoms in women undergoing chemotherapy-induced and natural menopause: A prospective controlled study. Annals of Oncology, 21(5), 983–987. https://doi.org/10.1093/annonc/mdp394
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