| Literature DB >> 28881602 |
Xiangyu Guo1, Junnan Xu1, E Ying1, Zhifu Yu2, Tao Sun1.
Abstract
Individual differences in depressive symptoms correlate with morbidity and outcomes in breast cancer patients. We evaluated the effect of hormone receptor (HR) status on depressive symptoms in 176 women with metastatic breast cancer at diagnosis. To assess depression, the women completed Self-Rating Depression Scale (SDS) questionnaires at baseline examination (T1), after 4 chemotherapy cycles (T2) and after 6 months (T3). At baseline examination, 45/176 (25.6%) patients were found to be at high or medium risk for depression (SDS score ≥0.6). Among these, depression was both prevalent in HR-positive patients and in HR-negative patients (64.4% versus 51.4%, P = 0.001). In multivariate model, HR positivity and higher depression risk were associated with poorer overall survival (25.0 months versus 32.0 months, P < 0.05). Patients at high/medium risk of depression were treated with the antidepressant agent fluoxetine (N = 23) or no drug (N = 22). SDS scores in patients treated with fluoxetine were lower after 4 chemotherapy cycles and after 6 months than in the control group (mean scores: T2, 0.61 versus 0.67, P = 0.001; T3, 0.56 versus 0.65, P < 0.001). No difference on SDS scores was found between patients with positive or negative HR status during fluoxetine treatment. These findings suggest hormone receptor status is associated with depressive symptoms in patients with metastatic breast cancer. Fluoxetine relieves depressive symptoms in these patients, regardless of hormone receptor status.Entities:
Keywords: SDS; breast cancer; depression; fluoxetine; hormone receptor
Year: 2017 PMID: 28881602 PMCID: PMC5584203 DOI: 10.18632/oncotarget.15037
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oncotarget ISSN: 1949-2553
Clinicopathologic characteristics of the study sample
| All | Major/medium | Minor | Not depressed | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| | 49.5 [ | 51 [ | 50 [ | 48 [ |
| N = 166 | N = 43 | N = 54 | N = 69 | |
| Premenopausal | 50 (28.4) | 9 (20.0) | 17 (28.8) | 24 (33.3) |
| Postmenopausal | 116 (65.9) | 34 (75.6) | 37 (62.7) | 45 (62.5) |
| N = 175 | N = 45 | N = 59 | N = 71 | |
| | 24.1 [ | 24.2 [16.7,31.3] | 24.0 [18.8,30.5] | 24.1 [17.7,33.2] |
| N = 102 | N = 27 | N = 37 | N = 38 | |
| | 2.35 [0.7-6.0] | 2.50 [1.2-5.1] | 2.0 [0.8-6.0] | 2.75 [0.7-6.0] |
| Negative | 36 (20.4) | 11 (24.5) | 10 (16.9) | 15 (20.8) |
| Positive | 114 (64.8) | 28 (62.2) | 41 (69.5) | 45 (62.5) |
| Unknown | 26 (14.8) | 6 (13.3) | 8 (13.6) | 12 (16.7) |
| Positive | 99 (56.3) | 29 (64.4) | 34 (57.6) | 36 (50.0) |
| Negative | 77 (43.7) | 16 (35.6) | 25 (42.4) | 36 (50.0) |
| Positive | 84 (47.7) | 25 (55.6) | 33 (55.9) | 26 (36.1) |
| Negative | 92 (52.3) | 20 (44.4) | 26 (44.1) | 46 (63.9) |
| Positive | 42 (23.9) | 7 (15.6) | 10 (16.9) | 25 (34.7) |
| Negative | 112 (63.6) | 32 (71.1) | 43 (72.9) | 37 (51.4) |
| Unknown | 22 (12.5) | 6 (13.3) | 6 (10.2) | 10 (13.9) |
| Ductal | 140 (79.6) | 36 (80.0) | 46 (78.0) | 58 (80.6) |
| Lobular | 12 (6.8) | 4 (8.9) | 3 (5.1) | 5 (6.9) |
| Others | 24 (13.6) | 5 (11.1) | 10 (16.9) | 9 (12.5) |
| <24 months | 64 (36.4) | 11 (24.4) | 20 (33.9) | 33 (45.8) |
| ≥24 months | 112 (63.6) | 34 (75.6) | 39 (66.1) | 39 (54.2) |
| Positive | 67 (38.1) | 18 (40.0) | 20 (33.9) | 29 (40.3) |
| Negative | 109 (61.9) | 27 (60.0) | 39 (66.1) | 43 (59.7) |
| Positive | 71 (40.3) | 14 (31.1) | 27 (45.8) | 30 (41.7) |
| Negative | 105 (59.7) | 31 (68.9) | 32 (54.2) | 42 (58.3) |
| Positive | 114 (64.8) | 26 (57.8) | 36 (61.0) | 51 (70.8) |
| Negative | 62 (35.2) | 19 (42.2) | 23 (39.0) | 21 (29.2) |
Figure 1Depression score values at 4 cycles (T2) after chemotherapy and 6 months (T3) after baseline examination (T1)
Fluoxetnine indicates fluoxetine treatment group. Control indicates control group. SDS, self-rating depression scale.
Figure 2Survival curve showing overall survival for metastatic breast cancer patients with major depression receiving fluoxetine or no drug (control)