Do cancer stigma and resilience mediate the relationship between Type D personality and quality of life in patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy?
Cancer stigma and resilience mediate the negative impact of Type D personality on quality of life in breast cancer patients undergoing chemotherapy, suggesting targets for psychosocial interventions.
PURPOSE To determine the statistically mediating roles of cancer stigma and resilience in the relationship between Type D personality and quality of life (QoL) in patients with breast cancer undergoing chemotherapy. METHODS This cross-sectional correlational study included 129 inpatients with breast cancer recruited from a university hospital-affiliated cancer center ward. Participants completed questionnaires assessing their Type D personality, cancer stigma, resilience, and QoL. Data were analyzed using Pearson's correlation, hierarchical regression, and PROCESS Macro-mediation analysis (Model 4, 50,000 bootstrap samples). RESULTS Type D personality negatively correlated with resilience (r = -0.493, p < 0.001) and QoL (r = -0.407, p < 0.001) and positively correlated with cancer stigma (r = 0.387, p < 0.001). Cancer stigma negatively correlated with resilience (r = -0.257, p = 0.003) and QoL (r = -0.455, p < 0.001). Meanwhile, resilience was positively associated with QoL (r = 0.514, p < 0.001). Regression analysis showed that cancer stigma and resilience significantly predicted QoL (β = -0.305, p < 0.001; β = 0.326, p < 0.001), accounting for 26.4% of the variance. Bootstrapped mediation analysis indicated that cancer stigma and resilience explained the link between type D personality and QoL (B = -0.0128, 95% BootCI -0.0194, -0.0070). Two significant indirect pathways between type D personality and QoL were identified: perceived cancer stigma (B = -0.0058, 95% BootCI -0.0104, -0.0018) and resilience (B = -0.0070, 95% BootCI -0.0130, -0.0025). CONCLUSION Reducing cancer stigma and enhancing resilience may help improve QoL among patients with breast cancer receiving chemotherapy, particularly those with Type D personality. These findings underscore the importance of targeted psychosocial nursing interventions.
Kim et al. (Mon,) studied this question.