| Literature DB >> 16465173 |
S Williams1, J Dale.
Abstract
Depression is common in cancer patients, and this often remains undetected and untreated. Depression has been associated with poorer quality of life, in addition to increased impairment of immune response and poorer survival in cancer patients. Previous systematic reviews and meta-analyses of the efficacy of interventions for cancer patients with depression have failed to distinguish between caseness for depression and depressive symptoms. The findings from this systematic review show that there is limited trial data on the efficacy of prescribed antidepressants in reducing the incidence of major depression and depressive symptoms in cancer patients. Contrary to previous reviews that failed to distinguish between depressive symptoms and depression, this review found very little data from clinical trials (without the possibility of confounding factors) to demonstrate that psychotherapeutic interventions are effective in reducing depression in cancer patients. A number of small-scale, single-centre trials indicated that psychotherapeutic interventions (especially cognitive behavioural therapy) can have effects on depressive symptoms in cancer patients. However, given the methodological limitations of studies to date, lack of evidence should not be interpreted as implying lack of efficacy. In conclusion, there is a need for adequately powered studies of pharmacological and psychotherapeutic studies, which are targeted at cancer patients with a diagnosis of depression and include monitoring of the use of other pharmacological/psychotherapeutic and complementary and alternative medicine interventions.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16465173 PMCID: PMC2361139 DOI: 10.1038/sj.bjc.6602949
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Br J Cancer ISSN: 0007-0920 Impact factor: 7.640
Search strategy terms
| Search terms were taken from known articles relevant to the review and the Medical Subject Headings (MeSH) thesaurus of the US National Library of Medicine (NLM). The search terms included: ‘ |
Figure 1Number of studies yielded by search strategy.
Characteristics of included studies (n=24)
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| | 549 cancer patients with a diagnosis of any type of cancer reporting fatigue at their second chemotherapy cycle Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=56.5 (12.6) C=56.3 (12.3) Gender: I=80% female C=71% female | I= | Depressive symptoms CES-D and DD Assessments performed at baseline (cycle 2 of chemotherapy), cycle 3 and cycle 4 | At conclusion (cycle 4) the paroxetine group had a significantly lower mean level of depression than placebo group as measure on the CES-D ( | Not reported |
| | 163 patients with an advanced solid tumour and expected survival between 3 and 24 months Mean age (years): I=61 C=59 Gender: I=45% female C=55% female | I= | Depressive symptoms: 11-item BZSDS Assessments performed at baseline and every 3 to 6 weeks thereafter. Patients were assessed for 12 weeks and complete assessment involved three to five sessions of data collection. After 12 weeks, patients were given option to continue the study drug blinded for up to 9 months | The fluoxetine group improved significantly compared with placebo on depression scale ( | Not reported |
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| | 91 cancer patients with a major depressive disorder or an adjustment disorder as defined by DSM-III Patients with score of 13 or higher on the HADS at start Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=53.2 (11.4) C=52.6 (11.3) Gender: I=77% female C=82% female | After a single-blind placebo period of 1 week patients (to exclude early placebo responders and false-positive cases for depression) were randomised to:
I= | Depression/depressive symptoms MADRS, HADS Measured at baseline, 1, 3 and 5 weeks after the intervention | HADS, NS Tolerability: Frequencies of side effects between groups was not significantly different Digestive and neuropsychiatric types of adverse events were more frequent in the intervention group although this was not significant | Caseness, NS: The successful response rate defined by HADS score lower than 8 after 5 weeks of treatment was not significantly higher (11%) in the intervention group than the placebo group (7%) |
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| | 40 patients with malignant melanoma who were to receive high-dose interferon alpha therapy Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=52.8 (7.6) C=50.1 (13.4) Gender: I=50% female C=50% female | Interferon alpha has been associated with symptoms that overlap with those found in major depression
I= | Depression: HAM-D21, CDS, DSM-IV Assessment performed at baseline and at regularly scheduled intervals after the initiation of interferon alpha therapy for the first 12 weeks of a planned 48-week treatment period. | Tolerability: After 12 weeks, small reversible retinal haemorrhages developed in two patients and one patient had more severe retinal haemorrhages with associated irreversible loss of vision. All three patients were taking paroxetine. Retinal haemorrhage is a rare side effect of paroxetine and high rates of retinal complications occur in patients treated with interferon alpha. Paroxetine significantly decreased the likelihood that interferon alpha therapy would be discontinued because of severe depression or related neurotoxic effects ( | Paroxetine treatment significantly reduced the incidence of major depression ( |
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| | 94 female breast cancer patients receiving at least four cycles of chemotherapy and not undergoing concurrent radiation or interferon treatments Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=52.2 (9.3) C=52.2 (10.2) | I= | Depression/depressive symptoms CES-D and DD | Paroxetine was more effective than placebo in reducing depressive symptoms during chemotherapy as measured by the CES-D ( | By cycle 4, only four of the original 13 patients in the paroxetine group who had baseline CES-D scores greater than 19 still had scores above that cutoff point. This compares to all 13 of the initially depressed patients in the placebo group remaining above threshold. |
| | 55 women with breast cancer (stage I or stage II without metastases) with a diagnosis of depression according to the DSM-III criteria Mean age (years) (s.vnd.): I=51 (8) C=53 (8) | I= | Depressive symptoms HAM-D21 Measured at 14, 28 and 42 days after treatment | There were significantly lower HAM-D21 scores for the mianserin group at 28 days ( | Not reported |
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| | 59 couples with medical diagnosis of cancer in one partner with an estimated life expectancy of at least 6 months for the ill partner Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=Patient 50 (12) C=Patient 49 (10) Gender patient: I=70% female C=68% female | I= | Depressive symptoms Psychological distress – CES-D I=Once before intervention, 1 week postintervention and 3 months postintervention I2=twice before intervention, 1 week postintervention and 3 months postintervention | Among patients psychological distress decreased significantly 1 week after the intervention ( | Not reported |
| | 237 patients diagnosed with a solid tumour and within 56 days of undergoing a first cycle of chemotherapy Mean age (years): I=59.3 C=61.2 Gender: Approx 80% female | I= | Depressive symptoms – CES-D Baseline, 10 and 20 weeks | The intervention had a short-term (10 weeks) but no long-term (20 weeks) effect on patient depressive symptoms (ES=0.25–0.33 at 10 and 20 weeks, respectively) The intervention was more effective in lowering depressive symptoms at 10 weeks among patients with higher levels of baseline symptom severity. Among patients with high levels of baseline depression, the intervention was less successful in lowering depressive symptoms at 10 weeks than the conventional care control group alone | Not reported |
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| | 109 patients newly diagnosed with breast, colon or lung cancer who were receiving chemotherapy Mean age (years) (s.d.): 55.7 (11.9) Gender: I=87% female C=73% female | I= | Depressive symptoms CESD-20 Measured at baseline, time 2 midway through intervention and time 3 one month postintervention (24 weeks) | Patients who received the intervention had significantly fewer symptoms between baseline and time 2. CESD-20 at time 2 ( | Not reported |
| | 450 cancer patients The authors stated that patient demographics were well balanced in the two arms. Median age (years) (range):61 (18–92) Gender: 41% female | I= | Depression/depressive symptoms BDI –short form Measured at baseline, 2 and 6 months after intervention | For patient subgroup that were moderately or severely depressed at baseline, significant reduction in depression at 6 months ( | At 2 and 6 months, 73 and 90% of patients who were moderately or severely depressed at baseline were still so, whereas in the intervention arm, there were 58 and 45%, respectively |
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| | 78 stage II depressed cancer patients receiving radiation treatment Mean age (years): I1=54.2 I2=53.7 C=53.8 Gender: I1=37% female I2=33% female C=33% female | I1= | Depressive symptoms CES-D and SCL-90-R measured at baseline, 8 weeks and 6 months | Subjects who received either cognitive behavioural or social support group interventions had significantly lower CES-D scores than controls at 8 weeks ( | Not reported |
| | 72 women with primary breast carcinoma Mean age (years) (s.d.): 49.5 (6.2) There were no baseline differences between groups | I= | Depressive symptoms CES-D Measured at baseline and at end of intervention (12 weeks) | CES-D ( | Not reported |
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| | 100 women newly treated for stage 0–II breast cancer Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=48.1 (9.0) C=52.1 (9.0) | I= | Depressive symptoms POMS, CES-D Measured at baseline, post-intervention (3 months), 3 months and 9 months | POMS, NS
CES-D In the intervention group the proportion of women meeting criteria for moderate levels of depressive symptoms fell significantly at 3 months postintervention, 6 months and 12 months ( | Not reported |
| | 235 women with metastatic breast cancer who were expected to survive at least 3 months Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=49.5 (8.4) C=51.5 (10.3) | I= | Depressive symptoms POMS Measured at baseline and 4, 8 and 12 months after randomisation | POMS Depression dejection was significantly lower in the intervention group ( | Not reported |
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| | 125 women with metastatic breast cancer Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=52.9 (10.7) C=54.0 (10.7) | I= | Depressive symptoms POMS Measured at baseline and every 4 months during the first year | POMS Depression When follow-up assessments undertaken within 1 year of the patients’ death were excluded in the secondary analyses POMS Depression subscale was significantly lower for the treatment group, ES=0.27 | Not reported |
| | 50 women with primary breast carcinoma Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=52.6 (6.8) C=54.3 (7.5) | I= | Depressive symptoms HADS, POMSMeasured at baseline, 6 weeks and 6 months | HADS, NS | Not reported |
| | 53 women newly diagnosed with stage I or II breast cancer Mean age (years) (s.d.): 51.23 (12.5) | I= | Depressive symptoms POMS Measured at baseline, 1, 4 and 10 months | POMS Depression, NS | Not reported |
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| 124 women with metastatic breast cancer Mean age (years) (range): 50 (29–65) There were no significant differences in age between groups | I= | Depressive symptoms POMS Measured at baseline, after completion of therapy, 3 months and 6 months | After completion of therapy significant improvement in depressive symptoms ( | Not reported | |
| 36 newly diagnosed women with non-metastatic breast cancer assigned to adjuvant chemotherapy after surgery Median age (years): I=53 C=52 | I= | Depressive symptoms BDI Measured at baseline and after 1, 3, 6 and 9 months | Depression scores improved significantly over time in the intervention group (ES=0.27) | Not reported | |
| 272 women undergoing surgery for breast cancer Median age (years): I1=59 I2=55 I3=56 C=57 | I1=routine care plus | Depressive symptoms GHQ-28, HADS Measured at 1, 3, 6 and 12 months after surgery | Scores were lower in patients offered support from breast care nurse alone (I1)
GHQ-28 ( | Not reported | |
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| | 200 women awaiting mastectomy or sector mastectomy for breast cancer Mean age (years): I1=61 I2=62 I3=64 C=57 | I1= | Depression, Depressive symptoms HADS, GHQ-28, PSE schedule Measured at baseline, 4 days, 3 months and 1 year after surgery | More control patients were cases for depression on PSE criteria at one year than patients in the experimental groups ( | |
| 53 patients with gynaecological cancer Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=63.0 (9.6) C=61.2 (13.5) | I= | Depressive symptoms | The intervention was associated with a significant reduction in total HADS score ( | HADS score case/noncase ( | |
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| | 73 men with newly diagnosed testicular cancer | I= | Depression/depressive symptoms HADS Measured at baseline 2, 4 and 12 months | HAD Depression scale, NS | The proportion of patients scoring above the threshold on subscale was not influenced by adjuvant psychological therapy |
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| | 30 men who had recently undergone a radical prostatectomy for prostate cancer Mean age (years) (s.d.): I=57.5 (6.7) C=59.7 (6.6) | I= | Depressive symptoms GDS short versionAssessed at baseline, 4 weeks and 8 weeks | There was a significant difference in depression between groups at 4 weeks ( | Not reported |
BZSDS=Brief Zung Self-Rating Depression Scale; HAM-D21=21-item Hamilton Depression Rating Scale; SSRI=selective serotonin reuptake inhibitor; CES-D=Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression scale; POMS=Profile of Mood States; DD=Depression subscale of the POMS; TCA=tricyclic antidepressant; MADRS=Montgomery Asberg depression rating scale; CDS=Carroll Depression Scale; DSM-IV=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders IV; DSM III=Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders III; HADS=Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; CESD-20=20-item Center of Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; ES=effect size; Dutch POMS=Dutch version of the shortened Profile of Mood States; GDS short version=Geriatric Depression Scale; BDI=Beck Depression Inventory; GHQ-28=28-item General Health Questionnaire; GHQ-30=30-item General Health Questionnaire; SCL-90-R=Symptom Checklist 90 Revised; s.d.=standard deviation; PST=problem-solving therapy; CBT=cognitive behaviour therapy; PSE schedule=Present State Examination schedule; CNQ=Cancer Needs Questionnaire – short form; EORTC QLQ-30=European Organisation for Research and Treatment of Cancer Quality of Life Questionnaire C30.
Methodological quality of included trials summary (n=24)
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| Random allocation to treatment groups – method sufficiently described | 6 (100%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — | — |
| Blinding of investigators | 5 (83%) | 1 (17%) | — | 2 (11%) | 16 (89%) | — |
| Blinding of subjects | 6 (100%) | — | — | — | 18 (100%) | — |
| Concealed treatment allocation | 3 (50%) | — | 3 (50%) | 6 (33%) | 12 (67%) | |
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| Gender | 5 (83%) | 1 (17%) | — | 17 (94%) | — | 1 (6%) |
| Age | 6 (100%) | — | — | 13 (72%) | 2 (11%) | 3 (17%) |
| Ethnicity | 3 (50%) | — | 3 (50%) | 6 (33%) | — | 12 (67%) |
| Disease distribution | 3 (50%) | — | 3 (50%) | 15 (83%) | 1 (6%) | 2 (11%) |
| Cancer treatment | 3 (50%) | 1 (17%) | 2 (33%) | 10 (55%) | 1 (6%) | 7 (39%) |
| Depression/depressive symptoms | 6 (100%) | — | — | 15 (83%) | — | 3 (17%) |
| Screened for depression | 4 (67%) | 2 (33%) | — | 2 (11%) | 16 (89%) | — |
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| Psychotherapeutic cointerventions avoided by trial design | — | 6 (100%) | — | 2 (11%) | 12 (67%) | 4 (22%) |
| Psychotherapeutic cointerventions monitored | — | 6 (100%) | — | 5 (28%) | 9 (50%) | 4 (22%) |
| Pharmacological cointerventions avoided by trial design | 5 (83%) | 1 (17%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — |
| Pharmacological cointerventions monitored | 1 (17%) | 5 (83%) | — | 18 (100%) | — | |
| CAM interventions for depression avoided by trial design | — | 6 (100%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — |
| CAM interventions for depression monitored | — | 6 (100%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — |
| Clear description of intervention | 6 (100%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — | — |
| Outcome measures valid/reliable | 6 (100%) | — | — | 18 (100%) | — | — |
| Reporting caseness for depression at follow-up | 3 (50%) | 3 (50%) | — | 5 (28%) | 13 (72%) | — |
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| Attrition of subjects reported | 6 (100%) | — | — | 16 (89%) | 2 (11%) | — |
| Reasons reported | 6 (100%) | — | — | 13 (72%) | 5 (28%) | — |
| Sample size justification before study | 4 (67%) | 2 (33%) | — | 4 (22%) | 14 (78%) | — |
| | 2 (33%) | 4 (67%) | — | 9 (50%) | 9 (50%) | — |
| Intention-to-treat analyses stated | 3 (50%) | 3 (50%) | — | 6 (33%) | 12 (67%) | — |
| Reviewer _________ | ||||
| Article _________ | ||||
| 1. Study design (choose 1 only): | ||||
| Experimental randomised: | ||||
| ______ Placebo-controlled trial | ||||
| ______ Controlled trial | ||||
| ______ Comparative trial, no placebo | ||||
| ______ Time series trial | ||||
| ______ Crossover trial | ||||
| Experimental, unrandomised: | ||||
| ______ Placebo controlled trial | ||||
| ______ Comparative trial, no placebo | ||||
| ______ Time series trial | ||||
| ______ Crossover trial | ||||
| ______ Natural experiment | ||||
| Nonexperimental: | ||||
| ______ Cohort, prospective | ||||
| ______ Cohort, retrospective | ||||
| ______ Cross-sectional | ||||
| ______ Case–control | ||||
| ______ Case reports or case series | ||||
| ______ None of the above (describe): | ||||
| 2. What was the study question? (please use space below) | ||||
| Yes | Partial | No | N/A | |
| 3. Was the study question sufficiently described? | ||||
| 4. Was the study design appropriate to answer the study question? | ||||
| 5. Were both inclusion and exclusion criteria specified? (If case study, check N/A) | ||||
| 6. For case studies only: Were patient characteristics adequately reported? (If not case study, check N/A.) | ||||
| 7. Were subjects appropriate to the study question? | ||||
| 8. Were control subjects appropriate? (If no controls were used, check No). | ||||
| 9. Were subjects randomly selected from the target population? | ||||
| 10. If subjects were randomly selected, was the method of random selection sufficiently well described? (If subjects were not randomly selected, check N/A). | ||||
| 11. If subjects were randomly allocated to treatment groups, was the method of random allocation sufficiently described? (If subjects were not randomly allocated, check N/A). | ||||
| 12. If blinding of investigators to intervention was possible, was it reported? (If not possible check N/A). | ||||
| 13. If blinding of subjects to intervention was possible, was it reported? (If not possible, check N/A). | ||||
| 14. Was measurement bias accounted for by methods other than blinding? | ||||
| 15. Were known confounders accounted for by study design? (If no known confounders, check N/A). | ||||
| 16. Were known confounders accounted for by analysis? (If no known confounders, check N/A). | ||||
| 17. Was there a sample size justification before the study? | ||||
| 18. Were post hoc power calculations or confidence intervals reported for statistically nonsignificant results? | ||||
| 19. Were statistical analyses appropriate? | ||||
| 20. Were statistical tests stated? | ||||
| 21. Were exact P values or confidence intervals reported for each test? | ||||
| 22. Were attrition of subjects and reason for attrition recorded? | ||||
| 23. For those subjects who completed the study, were results completely reported? | ||||
| 24. Do the findings support the conclusions? |
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| Yes | No | Unclear | |
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| Cancer treatment | ||||
| Depression/Depressive symptoms | ||||
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| (consider issues for access to healthcare treatment) | ||||
| Intervention treatment | ||||
| 1. Description of intervention and implementation? | ||||
| 2. Measure of compliance? | ||||
| 3. Cointerventions: avoided by trial design/monitored | ||||
| (Also consider issues for access to healthcare treatment) | ||||
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| Outcome measures used (adequately described, valid/reliable?) | ||||
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| See table | ||||
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| Yes | No | Unclear | |
| Economic analysis as part of trial? | ||||
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