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Table 1 Clinical and socio-demographic characteristics of 207 women after end-of-treatment for gynecologic cancer

From: Perceptions of care after end-of-treatment among younger women with different gynecologic cancer diagnoses – a qualitative analysis of written responses submitted via a survey

Characteristic

Total

(n = 207)

Cervical cancer (n = 130, 62.8%)

Ovarian cancer

(n = 57, 27.5%)

Othera

(n = 20, 9.7%)

 

Mean (SD)

Mean (SD)

Mean (SD)

Mean (SD)

Age at diagnosis

34.2 (4.9)

34.6 (4.1)

32.7 (6.2)

36.1 (4.7)

Age at time of study

37.1 (5.1)

37.2 (4.6)

36.4 (6.1)

39.1 (5.2)

 

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

n (%)

Treatment

 Surgery

110 (53.1)

86 (66.2)

11 (20.3)

13 (65.0)

 Surgery and/or chemotherapy and/or radiotherapy

97 (46.9)

44 (33.8)

46 (79.7)

7 (35.0)

Time since diagnosis

  ≤ 1 year

52 (25.1)

38 (29.2)

11 (19.3)

3 (15.0)

 2–4 years

111 (53.6)

71 (54.6)

27 (47.4)

13 (65.0)

  ≥ 5 years

44 (21.3)

21 (16.2)

19 (33.3)

4 (20.0)

Time since end-of-treatment

  ≤ 1 year

68 (32.8)

46 (35.4)

17 (29.8)

5 (25.0)

 2–4 years

103 (49.8)

69 (53.1)

23 (40.4)

11 (55.0)

  ≥ 5 years

36 (17.4)

15 (11.5)

17 (29.8)

4 (20.0)

Cohabitation at time of study

 Cohabiting

146 (70.5)

96 (73.8)

38 (66.7)

12 (60.0)

 Non-cohabiting

61 (29.5)

34 (26.2)

19 (33.3)

8 (40.0)

Education

 University degree

140 (67.6)

87 (66.9)

41 (71.9)

12 (60.0)

 Nine-years compulsory/upper secondary

64 (30.9)

41 (31.5)

16 (28.1)

7 (35.0)

 Missing

3 (1.5)

2 (1.6)

0 (0)

1 (5)

Children

 Yes

122 (58.9)

91 (70.0)

23 (40.4)

8 (40.0)

 No

84 (40.6)

38 (29.2)

34 (59.6)

12 (60.0)

 Missing

1 (0.5)

1 (0.8)

0 (0)

(0)

  1. aOther = Endometrial (n = 16), pelvic (n = 1), and vulvar cancer (n = 3); n numbers, SD Standard deviation