| Literature DB >> 25382962 |
Marianna Kyranou1, Kathleen Puntillo1, Bradley E Aouizerat2, Laura B Dunn3, Steven M Paul1, Bruce A Cooper1, Claudia West1, Marylin Dodd1, Charles Elboim4, Christine Miaskowski1.
Abstract
Depressive symptoms are common in women with breast cancer. This study evaluated how ratings of depressive symptoms changed from the time of the preoperative assessment to 6 months after surgery and investigated whether specific demographic, clinical, and symptom characteristics predicted preoperative levels of and/or characteristics of the trajectories of depressive symptoms. Characteristics that predicted higher preoperative levels of depressive symptoms included being married/partnered; receipt of adjuvant chemotherapy; more fear of metastasis; higher levels of trait anxiety, state anxiety, sleep disturbance, problems with changes in appetite; more hours per day in pain; and lower levels of attentional function. Future studies need to evaluate associations between anxiety, fears of recurrence, and uncertainty, as well as personality characteristics and depressive symptoms.Entities:
Keywords: anxiety; breast cancer; depressive symptoms
Year: 2014 PMID: 25382962 PMCID: PMC4222520 DOI: 10.1111/jabr.12017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Appl Biobehav Res ISSN: 1071-2089