BACKGROUND

Endometriosis is a chronic disease associated with stressful and prolonged treatment, high risk of recurrence and co-occurring infertility. Thus, it causes a heavy burden on both the body and the psyche of patients.

Every chronic condition including endometriosis challenges routines of life and imposes changes which constitute a set of demands the patient needs to face. In the light of stress theories, these demands initiate an adjustment process which leads to adaptation to the new life conditions shaped by both symptoms of disease and its treatment (Sharpe & Curran, 2006). The acceptance of emerging difficulties related to a chronic condition is one of the aspects of adaptation to illness. Illness acceptance is seen as a profound factor positively affecting the quality of life, wellbeing, physical functioning (Chan, 2012) and medical treatment adherence (Martynow et al., 2017) of chronically ill persons. There are many studies on illness acceptance, its predictors and outcomes in various kinds of medical conditions but not, according to our best knowledge, in endometriosis.

We assume that endometriosis acceptance relates to characteristics of disease (chronicity, pain, infertility, diagnostic delay) and individual characteristics (sociodemographics and strategies of coping with pain). It is the aim of this paper to verify this assumption.

SELECTED CHARACTERISTICS OF ENDOMETRIOSIS

CHRONICITY

Diagnosis of chronic illness changes lives, and is often associated with a serious crisis, which takes many years to overcome. It initiates a long-term process of adaptation to the unwanted changes caused by the disease.

There are many definitions of chronic illness, mainly referring to seven main characteristics that are also typical of endometriosis:

  1. Long duration: women suffering from endometriosis experience symptoms for many years. Data show that in 97% of women these symptoms disappear only after menopause (Oxholm et al., 2007).

  2. Disease caused by irreversible pathological changes: although the cause of endometriosis is unknown, researchers agree that it results from abnormalities in crucial physiological processes – endocrinal (Bulun et al., 2010) and immunological (Berbic & Fraser, 2011).

  3. Slow and gradual course of illness: endometriosis develops relatively slowly; periods of remission are intertwined with phases of recurrence and exacerbation of symptoms.

  4. The essence: endometriosis is a systemic disease that debilitates the functioning of many organs and even entire systems.

  5. Somatic as well as psychosocial consequences: at the cellular level, endometriosis leads to damage in the organs, some of them being irreversible. It negatively affects performing social roles – limits participation in social life, makes it impossible or difficult to perform many everyday activities and to continue education and professional development, and also significantly reduces the ability to work (Andysz et al., 2018).

  6. Symptoms: the course and development of endometriosis can be controlled, but full recovery is not possible. It requires physiotherapy and changes in lifestyle that will maintain the effects of therapy and protect against recurrence. Some patients dealing with suffering which is not curable by conventional medicine reach for alternative methods. Psychotherapy and psychiatric treatment also may help in the case of mental health disorders due to chronic stress associated with the disease.

  7. Long-term treatment not leading to recovery: Patients need to be under constant or periodic care of a gynaecologist (to modify/maintain pharmacotherapy, periodically undergo ultrasound) because of the long-term treatment and the risks of symptoms reoccurrence. Since various other health problems accompany endometriosis (gastrointestinal problems, urological problems) patients are also under the care of doctors of other specialities.

PAIN

The painfulness of endometriosis makes this disease particularly difficult to accept. Endometriosis-related pain includes a combination of different experiences – acute and chronic pain; menstrual and pelvic pain; local and diffuse pain. The pain affects various areas of the body (abdomen, intestines, rectum) and occurs during various activities: walking, defecation, sexual intercourse (Denny, 2004; Ferrero et al., 2005; Fourquet et al., 2010; Stratton & Berkley, 2010). According to some (Fourquet et al., 2010), the adverse impact of endometriosis on the quality of life and mental health of patients is more severe than in other gynaecological diseases. Studies show that because of the pain, the deterioration of the quality of life in endometriosis can be compared to the one in cancer (Nnoaham et al., 2011). The pain associated with endometriosis is perceived as uncontrollable and unpredictable; thus, many patients believe it determines the rhythm of their lives.

The problem of pain results not only in physical suffering, but also a psychological burden. Previous studies show that women with endometriosis suffer from hyperalgesia (increased sensitivity to pain) and allodynia (experiencing pain as the response to stimuli which do not cause pain in healthy people) (Lundeberg & Lund, 2008). As pain is a common experience in endometriosis an important part of the treatment is pain management, which includes pharmacotherapy, physical therapy, education and psychotherapy.

INFERTILITY

Prolonged and fruitless efforts to have a child are traumatic for people who want to be parents (Herrmann et al., 2011). Endometriosis is considered one of the leading causes of infertility. It is diagnosed in about 25-40% of women who have problems with conceiving a child (Ozkan et al., 2008).Studies indicate that endometriosis can negatively affect any of the physiological stages leading up to pregnancy (Mon Khine et al., 2016). The chances of women who are ill to conceive are also reduced because of endometrial cysts and structural changes in ovarian tissue that contribute to the reduction of the ovarian reserve (Kitajima et al., 2011). This reserve is additionally reduced by surgical removal of endometrial cysts (Somigliana et al., 2003). Moreover, many women suffering from endometriosis also experience sexual intercourse as painful (Ferrero et al., 2005), which decreases the frequency of intercourse or even prevents women from having sexual relations.

ILLNESS ACCEPTANCE AS A SIGN OF ADAPTATION TO LIVING WITH A CHRONIC ILLNESS

Acceptance of chronic disease can be defined as an attitude of a chronically ill person characterised by the assumption that illness with its consequences is an integral and inevitable part of life to which one needs to get accustomed. For many people adopting such an attitude seem to be challenging or even impossible. Acceptance of the fact that the life changes caused by a chronic disease can be irreversible and followed by loss requires time, support, and a massive mental effort. Illness acceptance can also be understood as a kind of “negotiated contract” between the patient and the disease. The patient “agrees” to the presence of disease, and decides to deal with the limitations and changes that it caused (Zalewska et al., 2007).

Illness acceptance is considered as an important factor maintaining general well-being. Studies regarding different groups of patients have shown a positive association between disease acceptance and the quality of life (Baneh et al., 2018; Bień et al., 2015; Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2018; Mroczek et al., 2017; Obiego et al., 2017). Illness acceptance also negatively correlates with depressive symptoms (Uchmanowicz et al., 2016). It also influences the current as well as distant situation of the patient – it is associated with an improvement in adherence to prescribed drugs (Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016a; Qiu et al., 2019) and more frequent self-care and pro-health behaviours (Bień et al., 2015; Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016a; Qiu et al., 2019; Rode & Rode, 2018; Uchmanowicz et al., 2016). Therefore, the level of disease acceptance can be considered as a measure of the effectiveness of medical therapy (Mroczek et al., 2015). One study found that patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) who did not accept their illness showed more difficulties in their daily activities and in understanding their disease (Grassion et al., 2019). Other empirically confirmed effects of accepting the illness include higher self-esteem and self-efficacy among patients (Rode & Rode, 2018), greater independence in the disease (Rosińczuk & Kołtuniuk, 2017), better mental well-being (Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016a; Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016b; Rosińczuk & Kołtuniuk, 2017; Uchmanowicz et al., 2016), greater vitality despite pain and less frequent use of analgesics (Kratz et al., 2018).

STUDY AIM

The aim of the study was to identify significant predictors of illness acceptance in patients with endometriosis. Despite the nuisance of this illness and its effects on mental health, according to the authors’ best knowledge, this topic has not been investigated yet. Knowledge on the conditions for the acceptance of endometriosis will enable planning interventions aimed at minimizing its negative mental consequences.

PARTICIPANTS AND PROCEDURE

PARTICIPANTS

The study protocol was accepted by the Bioethics Committee of the Nofer Institute of Occupational Medicine. Patient recruitment and data collection lasted from 2014 to 2016. The study participants were recruited in Poland, in medical facilities from 6 voivodship cities and through a patients’ association.

To be included in the study, a patient had to be diagnosed with endometriosis, regardless of the method of diagnosis. The method of selecting patients for the sample was the convenient one – participants were selected based on availability and willingness to take part. The medical records were not verified.

Depending on the place of recruitment, the qualification for inclusion was performed by a gynaecologist or participants volunteered themselves. No exclusion criterion was applied.

The participants received a set of questionnaires, each set packed in a separate envelope. All of them were informed about the purpose of the study (the set included an attachment with the information for patients) and they completed the questionnaires anonymously. A woman receiving a set of questionnaires could give it back without completing it. The participants filled in the questionnaires in the premises of the medical facilities where they were recruited (hospitals or clinics) or at home.

The output database consisted of 360 records. Due to missing data in any measured variable 74 records were removed (21% of the sample). Analyses were performed based on 247 records.

MEASUREMENT

Acceptance of Illness Scale by Felton et al. (1984) adapted to Polish by Juczyński (2009) – a one-dimensional tool to study adults who are currently ill. It contains eight statements describing the negative consequences of the disease, to which the respondent refers by choosing a response on a 5-degree scale ranging from 1 (I strongly agree) to 5 (I strongly disagree). Example of a scale statement: “I have difficulty adapting to the limitations imposed by the disease”.

The higher the score is, the greater is the acceptance of the disease and the better the adaptation to living with the disease. The overall disease acceptance rate is the sum of all points, which can range from 8 to 40 points. The reliability of the scale measured with Cronbach’s α coefficient equalled .90.

Pain scale from the Endometriosis Health Profile-30 (EHP-30; Jones et al., 2001) aimed at measuring the quality of life of patients with endometriosis. The Polish version of the tool is made available for scientific purposes by the University of Oxford.

The questionnaire allows one to estimate the general quality of life with endometriosis as well as the quality of life in five dimensions: pain, control and powerlessness, emotional well-being, social support and self-image. In this analysis, only the results of the pain scale were considered. The scale includes questions on how the disease-induced pain makes it impossible to perform housework, work, rest (example item: “Been unable to go to social events because of the pain?”1; the reliability of the scale as measured with Cronbach’s α was .97).

The general score and scores on particular scales ranged from 0 to 100. The higher the result, the more often the symptoms were experienced. The response scale ranges from 0 (never) to 4 (always). Respondents are asked to refer to their experiences of the past 4 weeks.

The Coping Strategies Questionnaire (CSQ; Juczyński, 2009) used to assess the frequency of seven pain management strategies: diverting attention (for example, “I try to think of something pleasant”; Cronbach’s α = .80); reinterpreting pain sensations (“I try to feel distant from the pain, almost as if the pain was in somebody else’s body”; α = .87; catastrophizing (“It is terrible and I feel it is never going to get any better”; α =. 89); ignoring pain sensations (“I don’t pay any attention to it”; α = .82); praying/hoping (“I know someday someone will be there to help me and it will go away for a while”; α = .79); coping self-statements (“I tell myself I can’t let the pain stand in the way of what I have to do”; α = .84) and increased behavioural activity (“I leave the house and do something, such as going to the movies or shopping”; α = .83).

The score on each scale ranges from 0 to 36. The higher the score, the more often the strategy is used.

STATISTICAL ANALYSIS

The following variables were considered as potential predictors of illness acceptance:

  • variables related to the disease (painfulness of endometriosis, comorbid infertility, diagnostic delay, years of living with the diagnosis),

  • demographic variables (age, place of residence, education, income, fact of having children),

  • psychological variables: pain coping strategies.

To analyse the data and address the research aim, stepwise hierarchical regression was used.

In the first step, the variables considered to be the strongest predictors of endometriosis acceptance were introduced: the frequency of pain and infertility. In the second step: the subscales of the CSQ questionnaire that correlated with the AIS questionnaire: the reinterpretation of pain sensations, catastrophic pain and praying/hoping (see Table 4). In the third step, we controlled for: demographic variables (age, place of residence, education, income, having children) and two disease-related variables (diagnostic delay and years of living with the diagnosis).

The analyses were carried out using the statistical program SPSS version 23.

RESULTS

The study group included young women, most of them being residents of large cities, having higher education, assessing their economic situation as good or very good and having no children. Demographic variables and variables related to endometriosis characteristics and disease history are presented in Tables 1-3.

Table 1

Demographic characteristics of the sample

M (SD), min-maxn (%)
Age32.52 (6.21), 20-60
Place of residence
  City of more than 100,000 inhabitants141 (57)
  City 20,000-100,000 inhabitants49 (20)
  City of less than 20,000 inhabitants27 (11)
  Country30 (12)
Education
  Vocational secondary education10 (4)
  General secondary education43 (17)
  Master’s degree/Bachelor’s degree194 (79)
Income
  Not enough for basic needs1 (0.4)
  Sufficient only for basic needs44 (18)
  Enough to meet your current needs without worrying whether you will have enough money until the end of the month86 (35)
  Enough to make small savings for unplanned expenses83 (34)
  Big enough to live without much sacrifice and save for the future.33 (13)
Children
  No139 (56)
  Yes108 (44)
Table 2

Characteristics of the group in terms of psychometric data

M (SD), min-max
Illness acceptance (AIS)28.34 (8.64), 8-40
Health-related quality of life (EHP-30)
  Pain39.26 (27.73), 0-100
Coping with pain strategies (CSQ)
  Diverting attention13.61 (8.36), 0-33
  Reinterpreting pain sensations9.12 (8.56), 0-36
  Pain catastrophizing14.49 (9.49), 0-36
  Ignoring pain sensations12.57 (8.31), 0-36
  Praying/hoping16.22 (9.15), 0-36
  Coping self statements19.05 (8.75), 0-36
  Increased behavioural activity14.79 (8.53), 0-36
Table 3

Characteristics of the group in terms of disease-related data

M (SD), min-maxn (%)
Diagnostic delay5.92 (6.30), 0-28
Years of living with diagnosis3.34 (3.83), 0-19
Infertility
  Yes86 (35)
  No161 (65)

Three significant correlations between the AIS and CSQ scales were found. All correlations were negative. Moderate correlations were found between the illness acceptance scale and the reinterpreting pain sensations scale and the praying/hoping scale. Moderate correlations were found between the illness acceptance scale and the pain catastrophizing (Table 4).

Table 4

Correlations between illness acceptance (AIS score) and coping with pain strategies (subscales of the CSQ questionnaire)

Diverting attentionReinterpreting pain sensationsPain catastrophizingIgnoring pain sensationsPraying/ hopingCoping self statementsIncreased behavioural activity
AIS–.10–.13*–.42**.03–.23**–.02.00

[i] Note. *p < .01, **p < .05.

Pain and infertility introduced into the model in the first step explained 18% of the variance of illness acceptance. Infertility turned out to be insignificant. The addition of pain management strategies in the second step maintained the significance of the model and increased the percentage of the explained variance to 24%. The final significant model (p < .001) consisted of the following variables: pain, reinterpreting pain sensations, pain catastrophizing and praying/hoping (Table 5). Only two variables were significant predictors in this model: pain and pain catastrophizing. The results for the reinterpreting of pain sensations was on the threshold of significance.

Table 5

Stepwise hierarchical regression estimating the significance of the predictors of illness acceptance (AIS score)

StepPredictorNon-standardized coefficientsStandardized coefficientstpFpR2p
BSEβ
1pain–0.130.02–.42–7.18< .00128.46< .001.18< .001
infertility–1.711.05–.09–1.63.105
2pain–0.090.02–.28–4.23< .00116.19< .001.24< .001
infertility–1.731.02–.10–1.70.091
reinterpreting pain sensations–0.110.06–.11–1.92.056
pain catastrophizing–0.240.06–.27–3.81< .001
praying/hoping0.020.06.030.38.703
3pain–0.080.02–.27–4.00< .00111.04< .001.25.102
infertility–1.331.03–.07–1.29.197
reinterpreting pain sensations–0.100.06–.10–1.72.087
pain catastrophizing–0.210.07–.23–3.21.002
praying/hoping0.020.06.020.27.788
years of living with diagnosis–0.260.15–.11–1.73.085
age–0.020.09–.02–0.27.786
diagnostic delay–0.130.09–.10–1.55.123

[i] Note. The following variables were excluded from the final model: years with diagnosis, age, diagnostic delay, place of residence, education, income, fact of having children.

Thus, the lower the score on the EHP-30 pain scale and the lower the score on the pain catastrophizing scale, the higher the score on the AIS.

DISCUSSION

The results of this study confirm the importance of chronic pain-related variables: the frequency of the experienced pain and pain catastrophizing as factors shaping the acceptance of endometriosis. Demographic and disease-related variables, such as infertility, diagnostic delay or years of living with the diagnosis, turned out to be insignificant.

Compared to other studies, patients with endometriosis on reported comparable illness acceptance to patients with gestational diabetes (Baneh et al., 2018), polycystic ovarian syndrome (Rzońca et al., 2018), breast cancer (Czerw et al., 2016b) and circulatory, urinary, and respiratory diseases (Janowski et al., 2013). The burden of endometriosis, therefore, corresponds to that of other illnesses, the severity of which is not disputed, i.e. chronic respiratory diseases or cardiovascular diseases.

The significance of predictors related to pain shows that in the study group illness acceptance depended on the acceptance of pain and coping strategy – in this case, the frequency of using pain catastrophizing. The less often patients experienced the endometriosis-related pain and the less often they used the catastrophizing pain coping strategy, the greater was their acceptance of the disease. This is in line with the conclusions of the review of endometriosis studies indicating pain as the biggest stressor in this disease (Zarbo et al., 2018). Concomitant pain generates specific physical and psychological costs. Mental suffering caused by pain changes the way patients experience themselves and the world. The pain in endometriosis is severe, paroxysmal and unpredictable. Experiencing pain of that type significantly reduces the quality of life, hinders satisfaction with functioning in every sphere of life and makes it impossible to perform the desired family, professional and social activities. It also worsens work ability, causes long-term sick leave, and in extreme cases even leads to losing one’s job (Andysz et al., 2018). Being such an impeding factor, it also hinders the acceptance and adaptation to chronic illness. In endometriosis, the pain sets the rhythm of life, and dictates its cruel conditions. Literally, it shapes the patients’ lives (Huntington & Gilmour, 2005), frequently limiting the scope of activity and functioning of the affected patients.

Importantly, our findings also indicate that pain catastrophizing is a meaningful predictor of low acceptance of the disease. Catastrophizing of pain might be defined as “an exaggerated negative mental set brought to bear during actual or anticipated pain experience” (Sullivan et al., 2001, p. 53). The evidenced association between pain catastrophizing and illness acceptance corresponds with the studies on the impact of such coping with pain on adaptation to living with a chronic condition. The studies clearly indicate its negative, non-adaptive influence on various aspects of adaptation to the disease. Pain catastrophizing contributes to the intensification or persistence of pain sensations (Carey et al., 2014; Sullivan et al., 2001), and it is strongly associated with helplessness, increased stress, anxiety and depression (Esteve et al., 2007; Keffe et al., 2004; Richardson et al., 2009; Walsh et al., 2003), as well as disability (Lami et al., 2018; Vowles et al., 2008). Pain catastrophizing also results in specific behaviours related to treatment, i.e. more frequent doctor’s appointments (Quartana et al., 2009), longer stays in hospital (Wright et al., 2017), and the use of strong analgesics (Valdes et al., 2015). The catastrophic attitude of patients may prompt doctors to take a more intensive and invasive approach to treatment (Sullivan et al., 2001). The patients’ complaints about the experience of severe pain make doctors look for its source in organs and thus refer such patients for surgery, sometimes multiple, more frequently (Walsh et al., 2003).

Separate attention should also be paid to insignificant results. One of the insignificant predictors of endometriosis acceptance was infertility. Endometriosis is considered one of the leading causes of infertility. It is estimated that in women with problems with conceiving a child, endometriosis co-occurs in about 20-50% of cases (Gao et al., 2006; Ozkan et al., 2008; Selçuk & Bozdağ, 2013). On the basis of data from Poland from 2005-2010 covering 1705 cycles of infertility treatment with IVF ICSI, the percentage of endometriosis in infertility was estimated at 10-15% of cases (Milewski et al., 2013). In infertility, there is a problem of growing and intensifying single crises associated with treatment and each monthly cycle that does not bring pregnancy (Dembińska, 2013). Until the moment of having the desired pregnancy and giving birth to a healthy child, or until a decision is made, for example, to adopt or accept childlessness, the experience of infertility turns into a chronic crisis leading to a life of continuous mental suffering (McCarthy, 2008). Therefore we find this result rather surprising. Also disease duration, which in the study of patients with COPD (Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016b), hypertension (Baczewska et al., 2015) and multiple sclerosis (Król et al., 2015) was a significant predictor of illness acceptance (shorter time since the diagnosis correlated with better acceptance), here turned out to be insignificant. Demographic variables (age, place of residence, education, income, having children) were also insignificant. In other studies higher socio-economic status was related to better access to health care, better treatment, better coping with everyday life and in general greater illness acceptance in pregnant women with diabetes, women with PCOS and patients with cancer (Bień et al., 2015; Czerw et al., 2016a; Czerw et al., 2017; Rzońca et al., 2018). Some studies showed mixed results referring to age – younger age predicted better illness acceptance (Baczewska et al., 2015; Cipora et al., 2018; Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016b; Janowski et al., 2014; Mroczek et al., 2015; Rogon et al., 2017), whereas another one showed no relationship (Czerw et al., 2016a); place of residence – some studies indicated that patients living in large cities had higher acceptance (Baczewska et al., 2015; Czerw et al., 2016a), yet, in another study on breast cancer patients the relationship between these variables was insignificant (Cipora et al., 2018). Also there was no significant relation between illness acceptance and level of education in our study. Other research on this issue brought ambiguous results – a few studies showed that better education is associated with higher illness acceptance just as in research on patients with COPD (Jankowska-Polańska et al., 2016b; Mroczek et al., 2015), hypertension (Baczewska et al., 2015) and breast cancer (Czerw et al., 2016b), while in other studies (on breast cancer patients and patients with pancreatic and colorectal cancer), this relation was insignificant (Cipora et al., 2018; Czerw et al., 2016b).

In conclusion, the chronicity, incurability, and the resultant difficulties debilitating patients’ activity in all spheres of life make endometriosis difficult to accept. This research evidenced that it is the experience of and the attitude towards pain that constitute the greatest burden. The quality of patients’ lives depends on their attitude towards the pain and the ways of coping with it. The acceptance of the inevitable pain and using adaptive coping strategies may contribute to a greater acceptance of the difficult experience of this disease.

CONCLUSIONS

As pain has the most significant effect on illness acceptance in endometriosis, any intervention aimed at enhancing or maintaining illness acceptance should address the issue of pain and its management. Due to significant comorbidity of endometriosis-related pain and depression (Lorençatto et al., 2006) the inclusion of antidepressant pharmacotherapy and psychotherapy is recommended to improve well-being and increase illness acceptance (Uchmanowicz et al., 2016).

Pain management could also be improved by psychotherapy based on cognitive techniques such as cognitive behavioural therapy (Lami et al., 2018; Turner et al., 2016), acceptance and commitment therapy (ACT) (De Boer et al., 2014; Trompetter et al., 2015), the mindfulness-based stress reduction approach (Turner et al., 2016) or mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (Day & Thorn, 2016). Changing illness representations and reducing catastrophizing, strengthening the acceptance and behavioural activation are the main targets of psychotherapy (Gillanders et al., 2013).

LIMITATIONS

This study has its limitations. First, the cross-sectional nature does not allow cause and effect to be determined: is the illness acceptance determined by pain frequency, or does the pain determine the illness acceptance? It is also impossible to verify whether pain catastrophizing is the effect of the pain or, vice versa, whether frequent pain causes its catastrophizing. These questions should be examined in future studies.

FUTURE DIRECTIONS

Future studies shall focus on deeper exploration of the determinants of endometriosis acceptance. This illness still frequently remains undiagnosed and since it refers to menstruation and fertility, it is associated with a social taboo. Patients are often left alone in their suffering. They cannot count on understanding and compassion because they often find it difficult to prove how much they suffer – their pain is invisible. Little awareness of what endometriosis means causes that their suffering is ignored. In many cases, patients are accused of exaggerating their suffering. Future research could, therefore, investigate the social determinants of acceptance vs. the lack of acceptance of this illness.