| Literature DB >> 31814865 |
Joanna Kruk1, Basil Hassan Aboul-Enein2, Joshua Bernstein3, Magdalena Gronostaj4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Epidemiological evidence continues to accumulate on the effect of psychosocial and behavioral factors in relation to cancer risk, progression, and mortality.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31814865 PMCID: PMC6877941 DOI: 10.1155/2019/1270397
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Oxid Med Cell Longev ISSN: 1942-0994 Impact factor: 6.543
Figure 1Flow diagram of literature search process.
Characteristics of the most relevant epidemiological studies on psychosocial factors and risk for breast cancer.
| First author/reference/location | Study design/sample | Follow-up years | Exposure | Effect size (95% CI) | Control for confounding |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Kruk, 2012 [ | Hospital-based case-control study | January 2003-May 2007 | Death of a close family member | OR = 2.48 (1.70-3.64) | Age, lifetime recreational physical activity, place of residence, education, age at menarche, breastfeeding, family history of breast cancer, exposure to cigarette smoke, alcohol consumption, and intake of vegetables and fruits |
| Personal injury, illness | OR = 2.60 (1.63-4.62) | ||||
| Imprisonment, trouble with law | OR = 2.94 (1.56-5.45) | ||||
| Retirement | OR = 1.52 (1.08-2.45) | ||||
| Lifetime scores > 210 | OR = 5.09 (3,41-8,50) | ||||
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| Wang et al. 2013 [ | Case-control study (157 cases, 314 controls) | June 2009-June 2011 | High perceived PS | OR = 1.65 (1.10-2.47) | Adjusted for potential lifestyle factors |
| Joint interactions high perceived PS with the following: | |||||
| Alcohol intake ≥ 11.0 g/day | OR = 2.91 (1.23-6.86) | ||||
| Smoking ≥ one cigarette/day | OR = 2.52 (1.16-5.47) | ||||
| Low physical activity | OR = 3.36 (1.77-6.36) | ||||
| High fried and stir-fried food | OR = 3.18 (1.79-5.63) | ||||
| High meat and sea food intake | OR = 1.89 (1.09-3.27) | ||||
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| Li et al. 2016 [ | Comparative case-control study 582 cases, 540 controls | May 2013-May 2015 | Frequent depression | OR = 1.32 (1.00-1.75) | Adjusted for main risk factors |
| Negative emotional experiences | OR = 1.15 (1.03-1.29) | ||||
| Disharmonious marital status | OR = 1.16 (1.06-1.26) | ||||
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| Sawada et al. 2016 [ | Prospective study 29,098 women, 209 cases identified | 21 years | Psychological traits: | Age, study area, education, family history of breast cancer, age at menarche, age at menopause, parity, use of exogenous female hormones, alcohol intake, daily walking, exercise, sedentary work, height, and BMI | |
| “Ikigai” agree strongly | HR = 0.81 (0.41-1.62) | ||||
| Decisiveness agree | HR = 1.07 (0.62-1.85) | ||||
| Ease of anger agree | HR = 0.98 (0.50-1.76) | ||||
| Perceived stress agrees strongly | HR = 1.00 (0.56-1.78) | ||||
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| Schoemaker et al., 2016 [ | Prospective cohort study 106,000 women, 1783 cases | 2003-July 2012 | Breast | Age, age at menarche, age at first birth, parity breastfeeding, hormone use, BMI, smoking, alcohol intake, physical activity, family history of BC, and socioeconomic status | |
| Death of close relatives | RR = 0.87 (0.78-0.97) | ||||
| Death of husband/partner | RR = 1.13 (0.88-1.46) | ||||
| Divorce/separation | RR = 1.15 (0.96-1.38) | ||||
| Personal illness/injury | RR = 1.03 (0.87-1.22) | ||||
| Mather death | RR = 1.31 (1.02-1.67) | ||||
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| Yeh and Lee 2016 [ | Prospective cross-sectional study, 54 cases, 1106 controls | On day prior mammography | Borderline anxiety | OR = 3.099 (1.685-5.698) | These risks were adjusted only for educational factors. Results of multiple logistic regression models presented goodness-of-fittest |
| Anxiety | OR = 2.173 (1.009-4.684) | ||||
| Depression | OR = 4.497 (1.643-12.308) | ||||
| Stress | OR = 1.124 (1.062-1.190) | ||||
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| Özkan et al. 2017 [ | Hospital based case-control study 491 cases, 512 controls | September 2013-September 2014 | Experience of stressors in the last 5 years | OR = 5.662 (3.767-8.511) | Age, BMI, family history of cancer, marital status, employment status, and economic conditions |
| Insufficient social support perception | OR = 2.166 (1.371-3.424) | ||||
| Avoidance coping strategy | OR = 1.882 (1.271-2.785) | ||||
| Child trauma | OR = 1.48 (1.14-1.91) | ||||
| Major life events | OR = 1.76 (1.22-2.53) | ||||
| Chronic stress | OR = 2.01 (1.52-2.67) | ||||
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| Butow et al. 2018 [ | Prospective cohort study (2,739 women, 103 cases) | May 2001-December 2010 (mean follow-up 7.2 years) | Experience of stressors in the last 3 years: severe (death of a spouse/child, handicapped child requiring full-time care) moderate (e.g., buying/selling a home) | Lack of statistical significance in all unadjusted and adjusted models | Family history of cancer, age at menarche, ovarian cancer, physical activity, HRT use, oral contraception use, BMI, anxiety, depression, parity, smoking, and number of live births |
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| Fischer et al. 2018 [ | Case-control study (664 cases, 203 population-based controls) | March 1st 1994 | Cumulative adverse life events | OR = 1.63 (1.00-2.66) | Adjusted for age, age at first full-term pregnancy, menopausal status, family history of BC, HRT use, smoking, race/ethnicity, education level, and physical activity |
| February 28 1995 | Previous personal illness: | OR = 2.84 (1.96-4.11) | |||
| Perceived as non-stressful | OR = 3.47 (1.34-8.94) | ||||
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| Yildirim et al. 2018 [ | Hospital-based case-control study (250 cases, 250 controls) | September 2013 | Loss of father during childhood | OR = 2.68 (1.30-5.52) | Adjusted for age, education status, marital status, work status, economic status, social security, age at menarche, age at first pregnancy and birth, family history of cancer, and history of psychiatric disorder |
| September 2014 | Serious stressor within the last five years | OR = 4.72 (3.18-7.03) | |||
| Inadequate social support | OR = 1.83 (1.23-2.73) | ||||
Abbreviations: HR: hazard ratio; OR: odds ratio; RR: relative risk; CI: confidence interval; BMI: body mass index; PS; psychological stress; HRT: hormone replacement therapy.
Characteristics of the most relevant epidemiological studies on psychosocial factors and risk for cancer other than breast cancer.
| First author/reference/location | Study design/sample | Follow-up years | Specific cancer site/type of measurement | Effect size (95% CI) | Control for confounding |
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| Cabaniols et al. 2011 [ | Case-control study (122 cases, 122 controls) | January–December 2005 | Brain | Age, sex | |
| Major life events | OR = 1.90 (1.13-3.20) | ||||
| Daily stress | OR = 0.90 (0.49-1.71) | ||||
| Work | OR = 0.69 (0.27-1.74) | ||||
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| Huang et al. 2013 [ | Nested case-control study (16,522 cases, 82,107 controls) | 1991-2009 | Pancreatic cancer | Age, sex, education, socioeconomic status region of residence, total number of children | |
| the death of a child | OR = 1.27 (1.12-1.45) | ||||
| or loss of a child due to suicide | OR = 1.23 (1.03-1.146) | ||||
| Persons with a history of psychiatric illness after child loss | OR = 1.43 (1.17-1.76) | ||||
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| Vasunilashorn et al. 2013 [ | Prospective cohort study (9,302 adults) | 1999-2010 | All diseases | Mortality risk | Age, education, marital status, survey wave, tobacco smoking, alcohol intake, sex, mobility limitations |
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| Momen et al. 2013 [ | Nationwide follow-up cohort study (2,729,308 children born in Denmark 1968-2007; 3,395,166 born between 1973 and 2006 in Sweden) 1,505,938 children experienced bereavement, and 9,823 were diagnosed with cancer before the age of 15 years | Started from birth and ended at date of cancer diagnosis, death, emigration, day before 15th birthday or at 2007 in Denmark, and 2006 in Sweden | All childhood cancers | HR = 1.10 (1.04-1.17) | Country, maternal characteristic at birth whether child was a twin |
| Central nervous system cancer | HR = 1.14 (1.02-1.28) | ||||
| Leukemia | HR = 1.12 (1.00-1.26) | ||||
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| Azizi & Esmaeili 2015 [ | Case-control study (207 cases, 207 controls) | April 2013–March 2014 | Colorectal cancer | OR = 2.49 (1.41-5.13) | Age, sex, family history of colorectal cancer, history of diabetes, smoking, BMI, physical activity |
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| Kikuchi et al. 2017 [ | Prospective cohort study 61,563 participants (25,018 men; 36,545 women) 330 rectal cancer cases, 680 colon cancer cases | Maximum 21 years (mean 13 years) | Rectal cancer | Age, BMI, family history of colorectal cancer, smoking habit, alcohol drinking, sleep duration/night, frequency of green leafy vegetables intake, daily time walking, bowel movement frequency, age of graduation, marital status, employment status, the number of children | |
| men | HR = 2.16 (1.23-3.78) | ||||
| High/severe level: | |||||
| men | HR = 1.75 (1.14-2.69) | ||||
| Colon cancer | |||||
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| Blanc-Lapierre et al. 2017 [ | Population-based case-control study (3,103 cases, 512 controls) | 1979-1985 | Different types of cancer, workplace PS | Age, ethnicity education, family income, respondent status, site specific, nonoccupational and occupational covariates like smoking, occupational exposure to asbestos and silica, BMI, exposure to aromatic amines, smoking, alcohol intake | |
| Lung | OR = 1.33 (1.01-1.75) | ||||
| Colon | OR = 1.51 (1.15-1.98) | ||||
| Bladder | OR = 1.37 (1.03-1.81) | ||||
| Rectal | OR = 1.52 (1.10-2.10) | ||||
| Stomach | OR = 1.53 (1.08-2.15) | ||||
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| Kim et al. 2017 [ | 229 cancer patients among them 77 with PD | November 2009–March 2011 | Gastric | Disease stages I-III, 5-year DFS rate 60% | Age, gender, Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group performance status (0-3; 4), marriage, education, employment, and adjuvant chemotherapy |
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| Chang et al. 2015 [ | Prospective study 601,775 people (502,297 men, 99,478 women) with depression | 20 years | Prostate cancer | HR = 1.13 (1.05-1.23) | Age, smoking, alcohol intake, exercise, BMI, cholesterol, blood sugar, hypertension, cancer family history |
| Cervical cancer | |||||
| Major depression (women) | HR = 0.90 (0.83-0.98) | ||||
| Overall cancer | |||||
| men | HR = 1.05 (1.01-1.09) | ||||
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| O'Neil et al. 2014 [ | 19 World Mental Health surveys with DSM-IV ( | 10 | Overall self-reported cancer diagnosis DSM-IV | Age, gender, person-year, country, alcohol consumption, country | |
| One disorder | OR = 1.3 (1.1-1.6) | ||||
| Three disorders | OR = 1.6 (1.2-2.2) | ||||
| > Five disorders | OR = 2.3 (1.6-3.3) | ||||
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| Archer et al. 2015 [ | Prospective cohort study ( | 17.4 | Overall cancers | HR = 1.03 (0.71-1.49) | Age, gender, employment grade, smoking, alcohol intake, meat consumption, physical activity, BMI, systolic blood pressure, respiratory illness, longstanding illness |
| 285 cases | <9 | New depressive symptoms | HR = 1.89 (1.23-2.90) | ||
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| Li et al. 2014 [ | Case-control study (250 cases, 500 controls) | January 2007–July 2013 | Prostate cancer | Smoking, alcohol intake, physical activity, marital status, red meat consumption, tea consumption, urinary system diseases, family history of BC, vegetables consumption | |
| Occupational setback | OR = 1.61 (1.00-2.59) | ||||
| Marital separation | OR = 1.94 (1.29-1.91) | ||||
| Self-contained suffering | OR = 2.37 (1.58-3.55) | ||||
| High sensitivity to the personal comments | OR = 1.73 (1.18-2.54) | ||||
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| Song et al. 2017 [ | Prospective study 101,708 participants declaring perceived stress at baseline, 17,161 cancer cases | 5 years and 10 years | Overall cancer | No association between baseline PS level and cancer risk. Slightly (4-6%) elevated HR in the group declaring higher PS levels | BMI smoking status, alcohol consumption, fruit/vegetable intake, physical activity, living arrangement, occupation, family history of cancer, study area. |
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| Blank-Lapierre et al. 2017 [ | Hospital based case-control study (1,933 cases, 1,994 controls) | 2005-2009 | Prostate cancer | Age, ancestry, first-degree family history of PCa, family income, education. Marital status, BMI, type 2 diabetes, depression treated with medication, alcohol intake, smoking, physical activity at work, frequency of fruit, and vegetable consumption | |
| Exposure to job stress duration > 30 years | OR = 1.40 (1.07-1.82) | ||||
| Low-grade PCa cases | OR = 1.36 (1.02-1.08) | ||||
| High-grade PCa cases | OR = 1.53 (1.03-2.29) | ||||
| Perceived workplace stress duration linkage with a higher PCa risk | OR = 1.12 (1.04-1.20) per 10-year increase | ||||
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| Vesterlund et al. 2017 [ | Danish Nurse Cohort, 6571 participants (854 cases) | January 2000–December 2013 | Job strain high | Age, night shifts and full-work time, smoking, alcohol, BMI, physical activity at work and leisure time | |
| Overall cancer | HR = 0.84 (0.7-1.1) | ||||
| Hormone-related cancer | HR = 0.82 (0.6-1.2) | ||||
| Virus immune-related cancer | HR = 1.08 (0.5-2.5) | ||||
| Digestive cancer | HR = 0.66 (0.3-1.3) | ||||
| Lung cancer | HR = 1.05 (0.5-2.1) | ||||
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| Jafri et al. 2019 [ | Matched case-control study (102 cases, 199 controls) | May 2015–December 2016 | Lung | OR = 2.21 (1.11-4.37) | Smoking, family history of lung cancer |
Abbreviations: HR: hazard ratio; OR: odds ratio; RR: relative risk; DFS: disease-free survival; PD: psychological distress; OS: overall survival; PCa: prostate cancer; RR: relative risk; CI: confidence interval; BMI: body mass index; DSM-IV: Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.
Figure 2Simplified hypothetical scheme for the role of psychological stress in carcinogenesis and aging. CATs: catecholamines; ROS: reactive oxygen species; O2·−: superoxide anion radical; HO·: hydroxyl radical; H2O2: hydroxyl peroxide; 1O2: singlet oxygen; NO·: nitric oxide; ONOO−: peroxynitrite; HPA axis: hypothalamic pituitary adrenal axis; SNS: sympathetic nervous signaling.