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Home NEWS Science News Cancer

New Questionnaire Developed for Accurate Assessment of Cancer Patients’ Anxiety

Bioengineer by Bioengineer
March 20, 2026
in Cancer
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Fear of cancer progression remains one of the most profound psychological challenges faced by individuals grappling with this complex disease. A new collaborative study, spearheaded by researchers from the University of Barcelona (UB), Universitat Rovira i Virgili (URV), and CEU-San Pablo University, marks a significant advancement in addressing this pressing issue by validating the Spanish adaptation of the Assessment of Survivor Concerns (ASC) questionnaire. This study introduces a streamlined, robust tool capable of quantifying cancer-related worries with promising clinical applications across diverse patient populations.

The ASC questionnaire, consisting of a concise battery of six targeted questions, is designed to measure specific domains of fear associated with cancer survivorship. These include apprehension about disease progression, anxiety related to forthcoming diagnostic procedures, existential concerns about mortality, and worries pertaining to personal and familial health. The psychometric validation, conducted with a substantial cohort of 1,052 advanced cancer patients across 15 Spanish oncology centers, underscores the reliability and validity of this instrument within a Spanish cultural context.

Crucially, the study, published in the journal Scientific Reports, demonstrates that the ASC questionnaire measures a singular underlying construct of anxiety related to cancer, irrespective of demographic variables such as age, sex, or tumor typology. This unidimensionality ensures that clinicians and researchers can implement the tool with confidence, facilitating standardized comparisons and assessments across a heterogeneous population of cancer survivors.

The robust statistical analyses applied to the large dataset reveal that elevated ASC scores strongly correlate with increased levels of psychological distress, including clinically significant symptoms of anxiety and depression. Furthermore, these psychological parameters are intricately linked with somatic symptom burden and diminished health-related quality of life. Such findings illuminate the profound interplay between emotional states and physical wellbeing in oncology patients, reinforcing the necessity of holistic care paradigms.

Interestingly, subgroup analyses elucidate demographic patterns consistent with international literature: younger patients and females tend to report higher degrees of cancer-related worry. This insight can inform targeted psychosocial interventions tailored to these more vulnerable segments of the cancer survivor population, emphasizing precision medicine principles that extend beyond pharmacological treatments.

Beyond its psychometric strengths, the ASC questionnaire’s brevity and ease of administration enhance its clinical utility. This characteristic is particularly salient in oncology settings, where time constraints and patient fatigue pose significant barriers to comprehensive psychological evaluation. Early detection of elevated survivor concerns via this tool can enable timely referral to psychological services, potentially mitigating the trajectory of anxiety and improving long-term patient outcomes.

The validation process incorporated multifaceted measurement techniques, including factor analyses to confirm the scale’s structure and differential item functioning analyses to assess its fairness across subpopulations. The rigorous methodological framework exemplifies state-of-the-art practices in psychometrics, ensuring that the Spanish ASC measures are both scientifically robust and culturally relevant.

Moreover, the study’s longitudinal design, spanning three and a half years, provides nuanced insights into the temporal stability and clinical applicability of the ASC in real-world settings. Patients were assessed during routine oncology visits, lending ecological validity to the findings and bolstering the argument for integrating psychological screening into standard cancer care pathways.

Urbano Lorenzo, a leading researcher from URV’s Department of Psychology involved in the study, emphasizes the transformative potential of integrating the ASC into daily clinical workflows. He asserts that this early identification of distress can facilitate personalized psychological interventions, shifting the cancer care paradigm toward more comprehensive survivorship care that addresses both physical and mental health dimensions.

This research contributes a pivotal tool in the arsenal against cancer-related anxiety, offering a scientifically validated mechanism to identify and quantify survivor concerns with precision and efficiency. It aligns with global health imperatives advocating for patient-centered oncology care that holistically addresses the multifactorial challenges survivors encounter.

In summary, the validation of the Spanish version of the Assessment of Survivor Concerns questionnaire represents a significant leap forward in psycho-oncology. It bridges a crucial gap by providing clinicians in Spain with a concise, validated instrument to gauge the complex emotional landscape of cancer survivors. The findings call for broader adoption of the tool, promising to enhance psychological care and ultimately improve the quality of life for millions living with cancer.

The implications of this study extend to the development of tailored psychosocial support programs and the optimization of resource allocation in oncology healthcare settings. By facilitating earlier and more accurate detection of cancer-related anxiety, the ASC questionnaire embodies a potent strategy to mitigate the pervasive psychological burden accompanying cancer diagnoses and treatment trajectories.

As cancer survivorship becomes an increasingly prominent phase of the disease continuum, research tools like the ASC questionnaire will play an indispensable role in shaping future interventions. These efforts underscore a growing recognition of mental health as a critical component of comprehensive cancer care, prompting an urgent call for integrated approaches that span biomedical and psychological domains.

The validation of this instrument is not merely a clinical triumph but a testament to the value of intercultural and interdisciplinary collaboration. It heralds a future in which psychological assessment and intervention are seamlessly embedded within cancer care frameworks, offering hope for improved outcomes and enhanced survivor wellbeing on a global scale.

Subject of Research: People
Article Title: Measurement properties of the Spanish version of assessment of survivor concerns in cancer patients
News Publication Date: 11-Mar-2026
Web References: http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41598-025-32396-x
Image Credits: URV
Keywords: Psychological science, Cancer-related anxiety, Survivor concerns, Psychometrics, Oncology, Quality of life

Tags: anxiety in advanced cancer patientsAssessment of Survivor Concerns questionnairecancer patient anxiety assessmentcancer survivorship psychological toolscancer-related diagnostic anxietyclinical applications of cancer anxiety toolsexistential concerns in cancer patientsfear of cancer progression measurementoncology patient-reported outcome measurespsychological challenges in cancer carepsychometric validation in oncologySpanish adaptation of ASC questionnaire

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