| Depression Increases Risk of Death for Certain Breast Cancer Patients | |
Becky Ham
However, late-stage breast cancer patients have a higher risk of dying if they
suffered from depression before their cancer diagnosis, say Karen Hjerl, M.D.,
Ph.D. of Rigshospitalet University Hospital in Copenhagen, Denmark and
colleagues.
Hjerl and colleagues acknowledge that the relationship between time of
depression and cancer stage is "difficult to explain," and suggest that a whole
host of factors may contribute to the differences in risk, including potentially
better psychiatric care for late-stage patients who spend more time under
clinical care.
The patients' ages or specific cancer treatments did not contribute to the
different effects of depression for early and late-stage patients, say the
researchers. Their study did not include women older than 70, those whose cancer
had spread or women with other serious medical conditions.
Hjerl and colleagues took advantage of a unique set of Danish national health
registries, which tracked breast cancer patients, their psychiatric admissions
and death records, to analyze the effects of depression in 20,593 women.
Post-diagnosis depression in early-stage patients, who have tumors smaller than
50 millimeters in diameter and no underarm lymph nodes, was associated with a
slightly elevated risk of cancer death, while having no significant effect on
late-stage patients.
Pre-diagnosis depression boosted the risk of death in late-stage patients with
larger tumors and lymph node spread. There was some increase in the risk of
death for early-stage patients with pre-diagnosis depression, but that was not
statistically significant, the study says.
Hjerl and colleagues say that more information about the women's other
illnesses, smoking habits and other lifestyle factors, including socioeconomic
status, may shed further light on how depression is linked to the risk of death
in different stage cancer patients. The exact mechanisms by which depression
might interact with breast cancer to cause death are still unknown.
The research was supported by the Danish Cancer Society, Bispebjerg Hospital
Copenhagen Hospital Cooperation, the Willy and Ingebord Reinhard Foundation, the
Martha and Acel Thomsen Foundation, the Inge and Finn Myrup Foundation, the
Inger and Max W¿rzners Foundation, and the Theodore and Vada Stanley Foundation.
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