🧭 The QoL Compass
- Definition: A patient's subjective evaluation of well-being, a critical endpoint in cancer care alongside survival.
- Key Domains: 📌 Mnemonic: Physical Pain & Social Suffering
- Physical: Pain, fatigue, functional status (e.g., continence, mobility).
- Psychological: Depression, anxiety, body image.
- Social: Relationships, ability to work.
- Spiritual: Sense of meaning, peace.
- Surgical Balance: The core conflict is Cure vs. Function.
- Goal: Maximize survival while preserving or improving QoL.
- Example: Limb-sparing surgery vs. amputation for sarcoma.
⭐ Palliative surgery's primary goal is QoL improvement (e.g., pain relief, de-obstruction), not cure. Success is measured by symptom control and patient-reported outcomes.
📊 Diagnosis - Measuring the Unseen
- Assessment: QoL is subjective; measured via standardized, validated questionnaires.
- Primary Method: Patient-Reported Outcome Measures (PROMs) are the gold standard.
- Directly capture the patient's perspective on health without clinician interpretation.
- Key Domains Measured:
- Physical: Pain, fatigue, nausea
- Functional: Ability to perform daily activities
- Psychological: Anxiety, depression
- Social: Family/social life impact
- Validated Instruments:
- EORTC QLQ-C30: General cancer QoL.
- FACT-G: Functional Assessment of Cancer Therapy-General.
⭐ PROMs are vital for comparing treatments with similar survival but different side-effect profiles (e.g., nerve-sparing prostatectomy vs. standard).
🌊 Complications - The Ripple Effect
Surgical complications create a cascade of negative QoL outcomes, extending beyond the immediate postoperative period.
- Physical Sequelae:
- Chronic Pain: Neuropathic (nerve injury), somatic (incisional).
- Lymphedema: Interstitial fluid accumulation post-lymphadenectomy.
- Altered Body Image: Scars, ostomies, amputations.
- Functional Deficits:
- Bowel/Bladder: Incontinence/retention after pelvic surgery (e.g., low anterior resection).
- Sexual Dysfunction: Nerve/vascular damage (e.g., radical prostatectomy).
⭐ Lymphedema post-axillary lymph node dissection (ALND) for breast cancer is a major QoL determinant, causing chronic swelling, pain, and recurrent infections, impacting daily activities and body image.

⚖️ Management - Beyond the Scalpel
- Goal: Balance oncologic control with functional outcomes and patient values through shared decision-making.
- Function-Sparing Surgery: Prioritizes organ/limb preservation (e.g., limb-sparing for sarcoma, sphincter-sparing for rectal cancer).
- Neoadjuvant Therapy: Shrinks tumors pre-op, enabling less radical resections and better functional results.
- Reconstructive Surgery: Restores form/function post-resection (e.g., breast reconstruction, head/neck free flaps).
- 💡 Palliative Interventions: Focus on symptom relief (pain, obstruction, bleeding) to improve QoL, regardless of curative potential.
⭐ Early palliative care integration, even alongside curative treatment, is a standard of care that improves Quality of Life (QoL) and can increase survival.

⚡ Biggest Takeaways
- The core principle is balancing oncologic cure with preserving function and quality of life (QoL).
- Shared decision-making is essential, covering risks, benefits, alternatives, and patient values.
- Palliative surgery focuses on symptom control (e.g., obstruction, bleeding) when cure is not feasible.
- Limb-sparing surgery is preferred over amputation for sarcomas if oncologically equivalent.
- Breast conservation offers similar survival to mastectomy with superior QoL.
- Nerve-sparing techniques (e.g., prostatectomy) are crucial to minimize functional deficits.
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