Literature DB >> 32355716

Elevated suicide risk among patients with urologic malignancies: highlighting at-risk populations.

Rashid K Sayyid1, Christopher J D Wallis2, Kyle Dymanus3, Usama Jazzar4, Hanan Goldberg5, Stephen B Williams4, Zachary Klaassen1,6.   

Abstract

Entities:  

Year:  2020        PMID: 32355716      PMCID: PMC7186707          DOI: 10.21037/atm.2020.02.73

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Ann Transl Med        ISSN: 2305-5839


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Suicide is the tenth leading cause of death in the United States (1). It is well-established that the risk of suicide increases approximately two-fold in cancer patients, with reported rates of 31.4 and 16.7/100,000 person-years in cancer patients and the general population, respectively (2). There has been improved awareness in the urologic community regarding the heightened risk of suicide amongst patients with urologic malignancies, and numerous efforts have been made to identify those specific patients at highest risk for such an event. Zhou et al. recently reported on suicide rates of over five million patients with various solid organ malignancies, with a specific focus on the adolescent and young adult (AYA) population, using data from the Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) database. The suicide mortality rates (SMR) were similar in the AYA and general populations (0.14% vs. 0.15%, P=0.15). Male sex, Caucasian race and unmarried status were associated with increased risk of suicide in both populations (3). These results are consistent with previously published reports in the urologic literature, which identified increasing age, male sex, Caucasian race, and distant disease as predictors of suicide risk in prostate, bladder, kidney, testis, and penile cancer patients (4). Notably, the second and third highest SMRs were amongst patients with bladder (0.37%) and prostate cancer (0.29%), with only nasopharyngeal cancer patients (0.38%) having a worse SMR. Furthermore, amongst all unmarried cancer patients, those with kidney and renal pelvis cancer were most likely to commit suicide in both the AYA [odds ratio (OR) 4.40, 95% CI: 1.38–16.91, P=0.0017) and general (OR 1.97, 95% CI: 1.52–2.56, P<0.001) populations (3). These findings highlight the significantly increased risk of suicide in patients with urologic malignancies. Patients with bladder cancer have been consistently shown to have the highest suicide rates compared to those with other urologic cancers (4). Consequently, significant efforts have been made to improve our understanding of this at-risk patient population. Using the SEER-Medicare database, Jazzar et al. evaluated the rates of post-treatment psychiatric disorders and subsequent cancer-specific and overall mortality in patients with clinical stage T2 through T4a bladder cancer, diagnosed between 2002 and 2011. Of 3,709 patients, 1,870 (50.4%) were diagnosed with post-treatment psychiatric disorders. This was particularly increased in patients who underwent radical cystectomy compared to those receiving radiotherapy and/or chemotherapy [hazard ratio (HR) 1.19, 95% CI: 1.07–1.31, P<0.01]. Notably, those who were diagnosed with a psychiatric disorder had significantly worse cancer-specific (HR 2.39, 95% CI: 2.05–2.78, P<0.01) and overall survival (HR 2.80, 95% CI: 2.47–3.17, P<0.01) (5). It has been suggested that patients with psychiatric disorders are less likely to follow up with their physicians, and thus, less likely to receive appropriate, timely treatment, which then adversely affects their survival outcomes (6). Significant risk factors for suicide in the bladder cancer population mirror those in the general population (3), and included: unmarried status (HR 1.74), white race (HR 2.22), male gender (HR 6.91), presence of regional disease (HR 2.49), living in the Southeast United States (HR 2.43) and not undergoing a radical cystectomy (HR 1.42) (7). There has also been a growing interest in the influence of pre-diagnosis psychiatric burden on outcomes in cancer patients. Using population-level data from the Canadian province of Ontario, we evaluated the impact of pre-diagnosis psychiatric care utilization on rates of suicide in patients diagnosed with one of the ten most common malignancies (prostate, breast, colorectal, melanoma, lung, bladder, endometrial, thyroid, kidney and oral cancer), between 1997 and 2014. The level of psychiatric care utilization within the five years prior to cancer diagnosis was used as a surrogate for psychiatric disease severity; patients were assigned a psychiatric utilization gradient (PUG) score of zero if they had no encounter with a psychiatric health care provider, one if they had an outpatient encounter, two if they had an emergency department visit related to their psychiatric disease, and three if they correspondingly required a hospital admission for psychiatric illness. Again, patients with cancer (n=676,470) had a significantly increased risk of suicidal death compared to matched non-cancer controls (n=2,152,682; HR 1.34, 95% CI: 1.22–1.48). This increased risk was most prominent in the first 50 months after cancer diagnosis (HR 1.60, 95% CI: 1.42–1.81), with the rates subsequently normalizing thereafter (8). These findings emphasize the importance of providing multidisciplinary psychiatric support to these cancer patients during this initial vulnerable period where they are most at risk for suicide. Interestingly, a cancer diagnosis in patients with a PUG score of zero or one (i.e., no encounter or outpatient encounter only) significantly increased risk of suicide, however it had no impact on suicide rates in patients with a PUG score of two or three (i.e., emergency department visit or inpatient hospitalization). These results suggest that patients with high PUG score, and thus worse psychiatric burden, are already at high risk of suicide, with a cancer diagnosis not significantly modifying this risk (8). It is those patients with a lower psychiatric burden who are most vulnerable to the effects a cancer diagnosis. Thus, efforts to target all patient populations, even those with low pre-diagnosis psychiatric burden, are crucial. Using the same cohort of patients and methods to quantify pre-diagnosis psychiatric burden, it was shown that patients with higher psychiatric utilization prior to cancer diagnosis had both worse cancer-specific and all-cause mortalities, with progressively worse outcomes with increasing PUG scores (6). These results are consistent with those reported by Jazzar et al. (5), and again suggest that such worse outcomes may be secondary to biologic factors and poor follow up with such patients. Fortunately, the current data suggests that over the last few decades the risk of suicide in cancer patients is decreasing. Zhou et al. evaluated the trends of suicide mortality rates over three decades: prior to 1993, 1994 to 2003 and after 2004. The standardized mortality rates for prostate, bladder, and kidney/renal pelvis cancers all progressively decreased from 0.55% to 0.34% to 0.14%, 0.46% to 0.28% to 0.16%, and 0.30% to 0.16% to 0.09%, respectively (P<0.001 for all) (3). This trend has also been demonstrated in other studies, with SEER data suggesting that diagnosis in earlier decades (1973 to 1983) was associated with a higher likelihood of suicide in patients with bladder cancer (7). This decreasing suicide rate in cancer patients is likely multifactorial in etiology. Evolving treatment strategies for cancer patients with associated improved prognoses are possibly causing less despair in these patients and, thus, less likely to result in suicide. Another potential reason may be increasing awareness of physicians regarding the vulnerability of this patient population and improved efforts to target this patient population and offer them appropriate, timely survivorship programs and support. Nevertheless, despite these obvious improvements, further efforts are still needed to better understand why patients with psychiatric illnesses still have worse oncologic outcomes and how we can minimize the impact of cancer diagnosis on suicide risk, especially in the immediate post-diagnosis period.
  8 in total

1.  Cancer diagnosis and risk of suicide after accounting for prediagnosis psychiatric care: A matched-cohort study of patients with incident solid-organ malignancies.

Authors:  Zachary Klaassen; Christopher J D Wallis; Thenappan Chandrasekar; Hanan Goldberg; Rashid K Sayyid; Stephen B Williams; Kelvin A Moses; Martha K Terris; Robert K Nam; David Urbach; Peter C Austin; Paul Kurdyak; Girish S Kulkarni
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2019-04-25       Impact factor: 6.860

2.  Impact of psychiatric illness on decreased survival in elderly patients with bladder cancer in the United States.

Authors:  Usama Jazzar; Shan Yong; Zachary Klaassen; Jinhai Huo; Byron D Hughes; Edgar Esparza; Hemalkumar B Mehta; Simon P Kim; Douglas S Tyler; Stephen J Freedland; Ashish M Kamat; Dwight V Wolf; Stephen B Williams
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2018-04-16       Impact factor: 6.860

3.  Suicide acts in 8 states: incidence and case fatality rates by demographics and method.

Authors:  R S Spicer; T R Miller
Journal:  Am J Public Health       Date:  2000-12       Impact factor: 9.308

4.  Factors associated with suicide in patients with genitourinary malignancies.

Authors:  Zachary Klaassen; Rita P Jen; John M DiBianco; Lael Reinstatler; Qiang Li; Rabii Madi; Ronald W Lewis; Arthur M Smith; Durwood E Neal; Kelvin A Moses; Martha K Terris
Journal:  Cancer       Date:  2015-02-17       Impact factor: 6.860

5.  Changing Trends for Suicidal Death in Patients With Bladder Cancer: A 40+ Year Population-level Analysis.

Authors:  Zachary Klaassen; Hanan Goldberg; Thenappan Chandrasekar; Karan Arora; Rashid K Sayyid; Robert J Hamilton; Neil E Fleshner; Stephen B Williams; Christopher J D Wallis; Girish S Kulkarni
Journal:  Clin Genitourin Cancer       Date:  2018-01-05       Impact factor: 2.872

6.  Incidence of suicide in persons with cancer.

Authors:  Stephanie Misono; Noel S Weiss; Jesse R Fann; Mary Redman; Bevan Yueh
Journal:  J Clin Oncol       Date:  2008-08-11       Impact factor: 44.544

7.  Suicide among cancer patients: adolescents and young adult (AYA) versus all-age patients.

Authors:  Huaqiang Zhou; Wei Xian; Yaxiong Zhang; Yunpeng Yang; Wenfeng Fang; Jiaqing Liu; Jiayi Shen; Zhonghan Zhang; Shaodong Hong; Yan Huang; Li Zhang
Journal:  Ann Transl Med       Date:  2019-11

8.  The impact of psychiatric utilisation prior to cancer diagnosis on survival of solid organ malignancies.

Authors:  Zachary Klaassen; Christopher J D Wallis; Hanan Goldberg; Thenappan Chandrasekar; Rashid K Sayyid; Stephen B Williams; Kelvin A Moses; Martha K Terris; Robert K Nam; David Urbach; Peter C Austin; Paul Kurdyak; Girish S Kulkarni
Journal:  Br J Cancer       Date:  2019-03-06       Impact factor: 7.640

  8 in total

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