| Literature DB >> 29133983 |
Stephanie Klügel1, Caroline Lücke1, Aurora Meta1, Meike Schild-Suhren2, Eduard Malik2, Alexandra Philipsen1, Helge Ho Müller1,3.
Abstract
Our aim was to summarize the current relevant literature on concomitant psychiatric symptoms with a focus on anxiety/depression in a population with gynecologic cancer; to identify the predictors, associated factors, and prevention strategies of psychiatric disorders; to examine psychiatric disorders in a population with recurrent gynecologic cancer; and to describe the limitations of the literature and future research areas. Little is known about attending psychiatric disorders in patients with gynecologic and other malignant diseases like cervical or breast cancer. However, patients suffering from other types of gynecologic cancer (eg, genital/cervical cancer) may also have an increased risk of psychiatric symptoms. In this review, we identify the potential information deficits in this field. A two-rater independent literature search was conducted using the PubMed/Google Scholar search engines to systematically evaluate the literature on the research objectives, followed by a critical reflection on the results. Of the 77 screened studies, 15 met the criteria for inclusion in this review. Patients with gynecologic malignancies, especially cervical cancer, had a very high prevalence of psychiatric symptoms including depression (33%-52%). Additionally, the risk groups facing higher rates of concomitant reduced quality of life and increased psychiatric symptoms such as depression were identified. Specifically, low socioeconomic status, sexual inactivity, absence of a partner, and physical symptoms were correlated with an increased risk. Patients suffering from recurrent gynecologic cancer should receive particular attention because of their significantly increased risk of depressive symptoms. Screening programs are needed to detect psychiatric symptoms in cervical cancer patients and the associated high-risk groups. Regular screening should be implemented, and psychosocial care should be provided during follow-up.Entities:
Keywords: comorbidity; coping; depression; gynecologic cancer; psychiatric disorders; resilience
Year: 2017 PMID: 29133983 PMCID: PMC5669786 DOI: 10.2147/IJWH.S143368
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Womens Health ISSN: 1179-1411
Overview of papers dealing with occurrence, predictors/associated factors, and prevention strategies of attending psychiatric disorders
| Authors | Year | Question | Design | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Corney et al | 1992 | Psychosocial adjustment following major gynecological surgery for carcinoma of the cervix and vulva | Prospective, cross-sectional | Interviews to elicit post- operative psychosocial and psychosexual problems (HADS) | Responses to the HADS indicated that 20% of the women were “probable” cases of anxiety and 21% were “definite” cases. On the depression scale, 18% were “doubtful” cases and 14% were “definite” cases. Two thirds of the women were sexually active prior |
| Cull et al | 1993 | Early stage cervical cancer: psychosocial and sexual outcomes of treatment | Prospective, cross-sectional | Self-reported questionnaires, semi-structured interviews | Mean scores for anxiety and depression were higher than general population means, and this sample scored higher for psychological distress than disease- free cancer patients, as indicated by published data |
| Lau et al | 2013 | Psychiatric morbidity in Chinese women after cervical cancer treatment | Prospective, cross-sectional | Cross-sectional study, interviews with Chinese bilingual SCID-I/P | Psychiatric disorders, predominantly depressive and anxiety disorders, are common in Chinese cervical cancer survivors |
| Kim et al | 2010 | Prevalence and predictors of anxiety and depression among cervical cancer survivors in Korea | Prospective, cross-sectional | HADS, EORTC QLQ-C30, and the McGill QoL – Questionnaire | Cervical cancer survivors showed relatively good mental health compared with healthy controls; however, women who have low functioning and well-being could be at high risk of anxiety or depression or both |
| Yang et al | 2014 | Prevalence and associated positive psychological variables of depression and anxiety among Chinese cervical cancer patients | Prospective, cross-sectional | Questionnaires (HADS, Herth Hope Index, Life Orientation Scale-Revised, General Self- Efficacy Scale) | The prevalence of depression and anxiety were 52.2% and 65.6% in cervical cancer patients. The anxiety score was significantly higher in patients from 4–6 months after diagnosis and at cancer stage II |
| Klee et al | 2000 | Life after radiotherapy: the psychological and social effects experienced by women treated for advanced stages of cervical cancer | Prospective, cross-sectional | EORTC QLQ-C30 and additional specific questions | Many patients experienced psychological and social consequences at the end of treatment and at 1–3 months after treatment. Patients continued to think about their illness and treatment throughout the 24-month study period but found it increasingly hard to share their worries with others. Their scores for overall quality of life never reached those of the controls |
| Bradley et al | 2006 | Quality of life and mental health in cervical and endometrial cancer survivors | Prospective, cross-sectional | Quality of life, mood, and demographics were assessed by questionnaires | The quality of life of cervical and endometrial cancer survivors was close to that of healthy controls by 5 years post-diagnosis. However, the cervical cancer survivors reported more negative mood than the endometrial cancer survivors or healthy controls. Cancer survivors who are unemployed or living alone may be especially at risk for mood and mental health difficulties |
| Bodurka-Bevers et al | 2000 | Depression, anxiety, and quality of life in patients with epithelial ovarian cancer | Prospective, cross-sectional | Questionnaires (CES-D, State Anxiety Subscale of the Spielberger State-Trait Anxiety Inventory, Zubrod score) | Clinically significant depression and anxiety may be more prevalent in patients with EOC than previously reported |
| Fowler et al | 2004 | The gynecologic oncology consult: symptom presentation and concurrent symptoms of depression and anxiety | Prospective, cross-sectional | Measures assessing depression (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale) and anxiety (Beck Anxiety Inventory) symptoms, common gynecologic signs/symptoms and sociodemographic characteristics | Reports of clinically significant depressive (42%) and anxiety symptoms (30%) were high. The number of gynecologic symptoms was reliably correlated with emotional distress. Age and absence of a partner may have conferred added vulnerability. For the women with partners, lengthier relationships appeared to offer protection against both depressive and anxiety symptoms |
| Hengrasmee et al | 2004 | Depression among gynecologic cancer patients at Siriraj Hospital: prevalence and associated factors | Prospective, cross-sectional | HRSR-questionnaire | Depression is one of the most common psychological disorders experienced by cancer patients. The prevalence of depression among gynecologic cancer patients at Siriraj Hospital was as high as 13.4%. Risk factors included low income, diagnosis of cervical cancer, radiation treatment regimen, and poor performance status |
| Distefano et al | 2008 | Quality of life and psychological distress in locally advanced cervical cancer patients administered preoperative chemoradiotherapy | Prospective, cross-sectional | SF-36 questionnaire on general health and HADS questionnaire on mental distress | Locally advanced cervical cancer patients administered preoperative chemoradiation showed quality of life scores comparable to those of EEC (early-stage disease) patients and a higher proportion of anxiety disorders; a low educational level and unemployment status were mainly associated with poor quality of life scores |
| Telepak et al | 2014 | Psychosocial factors and mortality in women with early stage endometrial cancer | Prospective, cross-sectional | Participants provided psychosocial data immediately prior to surgery, and survival statuses 4–5 years post- diagnosis were abstracted via medical record review | Adjusting for age, presence of regional disease, and medical comorbidity severity (known biomedical prognostic factors), greater use of an active coping style prior to surgery was significantly associated with a lower probability of all-cause mortality; life stress, depressive symptoms, use of self-distraction coping, receipt of emotional support and endometrial cancer quality of life prior to surgery were not significantly associated with all-cause mortality 4–5 years following diagnosis |
| Ashing-Giwa et al | 2009 | Cervical cancer survivorship in a population based sample | Prospective, cross-sectional | A cross-sectional design with a population-based sample ascertained from the California Cancer Surveillance Program. Descriptive, bivariate, and multivariate regression analyses were conducted | These cervical cancer survivors reported poor-to-moderate HRQOL with persistent psychosocial challenges. The findings indicate that lower SES, monolingual Latinas are at the greatest risk of poor HRQOL outcomes |
| Ye et al | 2014 | A systematic review of quality of life and sexual function of patients with cervical cancer after treatment | Review | Studies from an electronic database conducted between May 1966 and May 2013 were rated on their internal validity for methodological assessment. Thirty-two studies were included, of which 15 had a relatively good methodology | The studies showed that quality of life and sexual function in CCSs were compromised to different extents compared with the general population. More attention should be paid to quality of life and sexual function after treatment in patients with cervical cancer |
| Petersen and Quinlivan | 2002 | Preventing anxiety and depression in gynecological cancer | RCT | Patients were randomized to a control or intervention group and completed the HADS and GHQ-28 questionnaires | The intervention was associated with significant reductions in both scores |
Abbreviations: CCS-Comparative Candidates Survey; CES-D-Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Questionnaire, German Version; EEC-emotional expressing questionnaire; EOC-emotion orientated coping; EORTC-European Association for Research and treatment of Cancer; GHQ-28, General Health Questionnaire-28; HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale; HRQOL, health-related quality of life; HRSR-Health-related self-report; QLQ-Quality of Life Questionnaire; RCT, randomized controlled trial; SCID, structured clinical interview for DSM IV; SES-Sexual Excitation scale; SF-36 quality of Life assessment.
Psychiatric disorders in a population with gynecologic cancer recurrence
| Authors | Year | Question | No of patients | Design | Methods | Results |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thornton et al | 2014 | Emotions and social relationships for breast and gynecologic cancer patients: coping with recurrence | 35 | Qualitative | Individuals receiving follow-up care for recurrent breast or gynecologic cancer participated in an individual or a group interview; transcripts of interviews were analyzed using a coding form with two areas of emphasis. | Patients identified notable differences in their initial responses to the diagnosis of cancer and their current responses to recurrence. |
| Thornton et al | 2014 | Test of mindfulness and hope components in a psychological intervention for women with cancer recurrence | 32 | Prospective | Patients with recurrent breast or gynecologic cancer received 20 treatment sessions in an individual (n=12) or group (n=20) format; independent variables (eg, hope and mindfulness) and psychological outcomes (eg, depression, negative mood, worry, and symptoms of generalized anxiety disorder) were assessed pretreatment and after 2, 4, and 7 months; measures of session-by-session therapy process (positive and negative affect and quality of life) and mechanism (use of intervention-specific skills) were also included. | Distress, anxiety, and negative affect decreased, whereas positive affect and mental health-related quality of life increased over the course of treatment, as demonstrated using mixed-effects models with the intent-to-treat sample. Both hope and mindfulness increased, and use of mindfulness skills was related to decreased anxiety. |