OBJECTIVES: To assess the physical and mental health status of older long-term cancer survivors.
DESIGN: Cohort study using propensity score methods to control for baseline differences between cancer survivors and controls.
SETTING: General community population in the United States.
PARTICIPANTS: Nine hundred sixty-four cancer patients who had survived for more than 4 years and 14,333 control patients who had never had cancer from a population-based sample of Americans aged 55 and older responding to the 2002 Health and Retirement Study.
MEASUREMENTS: Medical conditions, symptoms, health behaviors, health status, mobility, activities of daily living, mental health diagnoses, self-rated memory, depressive symptoms, cognitive function, and self-reported life expectancy.
RESULTS: Cancer survivors reported higher rates of lung disease (13.9% vs 9.6%; P=.001), heart condition (29.3% vs 22.9%; P
Journal of American Geriatric Society
2005
http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1532-5415.2005.00507.x/abstract