| 12 Janvier 2015
 Increasingly, cancer patients are living many years after cancer  treatment, with the number of US survivors expected to top 19 million by  2024. While many survivors do well after treatment, some experience  continuing problems that can significantly impair their quality of life  well beyond the magical 5-year survival milestone.  These problems and  challenges can vary by the type of cancer patients had and the  treatments they received.   To assess the unmet needs of cancer survivors, Mary Ann Burg, PhD,  LCSW, of the University of Central Florida in Orlando, and her  colleagues looked at the responses from an American Cancer Society  survey, wherein 1514 cancer survivors responded to the open-ended  question, ‘Please tell us about any needs you have now as a cancer  survivor that ARE NOT being met to your satisfaction.’ "This study was  unique in that it gave a very large sample of cancer survivors a real  voice to express their needs and concerns,” said Dr. Burg.   Survivors most frequently expressed physical problems, with 38  percent saying they were an issue. (Problems related to sexuality and  incontinence among prostate cancer survivors were especially common.)  Financial problems related to the costs of treatment also persisted long  after treatment for 20 percent of respondents, with Black and Hispanic  survivors being especially hard-hit. Anxiety about recurrence was a  common theme expressed by survivors regardless of the type of cancer  they had or how many years they had survived cancer. The number and type  of unmet needs were not associated with time since cancer treatment.   “Overall, we found that cancer survivors are often caught off  guard by the lingering problems they experience after cancer treatment.  In the wake of cancer, many survivors feel they have lost a sense of  personal control, have reduced quality of life, and are frustrated that  these problems are not sufficiently addressed within the medical care  system,” said Dr. Burg. She noted that improvements are needed  concerning public awareness of cancer survivors’ problems, honest  professional communication about the side effects of cancer, and the  coordination of medical care resources to help survivors and their  families cope with their lingering challenges. 
Even decades after being cured, many cancer  survivors face physical and mental challenges resulting from their  disease and its treatment. That’s the conclusion of a new study  published early online in CANCER, a peer-reviewed journal of the  American Cancer Society. The findings could help clinicians and other  experts develop interventions that are tailored to the specific types of  problems and concerns that cancer survivors may experience.