| Literature DB >> 36197248 |
Lauren P Wadsworth1, Inga Wessman1, Andri Steinþór Björnsson1, Gudbjorg Jonsdottir2, Sigurður Yngvi Kristinsson1,3.
Abstract
Cancer screening is recommended for select cancers worldwide. Cancer screening has become increasingly effective and accessible and often increases overall survival. However, the mental health effects of cancer screening, such as its impact on depression, anxiety, and post-traumatic stress disorder, are largely unknown. Conflicting available literature indicates the negative, neutral, and positive mental health effects of cancer screening across cancer types. There are a limited number of randomized controlled trials measuring the mental health effects of cancer screening. Overall, the more negative and life-threatening the screening results, the greater the mental health effects. Screening for cancer without a known precursor, for example, due to family history, can have positive impacts such as decreased worry and increased quality of life. However, receiving a cancer diagnosis often has negative mental effects that increase with the life-threatening potential of malignancy. In this study, we review the existing literature and provide recommendations for future research to determine if and when cancer screening is the best practice.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 36197248 PMCID: PMC9509034 DOI: 10.1097/MD.0000000000030479
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Medicine (Baltimore) ISSN: 0025-7974 Impact factor: 1.817
Figure 1.Wilson and Junger conditions for justifiable screening.
Brief summary of mental health impacts of cancer screening.
| Mental health impacts of screening procedures | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Screening procedure without a known precursor | Screening with a known cancer precursor or risk factor | Receiving a false-positive cancer result | Receiving a cancer diagnosis |
| • Minimal negative impacts that diminish within month | • Potential increase in anxiety and depression, which may return to baseline | • Short-term negative impacts (increased anxiety and depression) that are eliminated when results are corrected | • Negative mental health effects (increased anxiety, depression, PTSD symptoms) |
| • Can reduce worry and increase quality of life | • Could decrease worry and intrusive thoughts | • Increased risk of suicide | |
Notable studies investigating the mental health impacts of various levels of cancer screening procedures.
| Cancer type/test | Number of subjects or studies | Outcome measure | Key finding | Year, author, reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mental health effects of screening in subjects without a known cancer precursor or risk | ||||
| Colon | 21,944 | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, Short-Form Health Related Quality of Life Form | No impacts on mental health by the screening procedure or receiving abnormal results | 2016; Kirkøen et al[ |
| Colon | 231 | Short-Form Quality of Life Assessment | 30% of participants reported a clinically significant improvement of the vitality and mental health domains | 2006; Taupin et al[ |
| Breast, colorectal, prostate, lung, and cervical | 13 observational trials; 9 RCTs | Most common measure was State-Trait Anxiety inventory | Mental health impacts were low, aside from in colorectal screening | 2017; Chad-Friedman et al[ |
| Mental health effects of screening in subjects without a known cancer precursor or risk | ||||
| Pancreatic | 102 | Cancer worry scale | People with a risk factor showed greater worry about developing cancer prior to screening. Screening resulted in no greater increase, and long-term positive benefits of mental health were evidenced. | 2020; O’Neill et al[ |
| Lung | 2537 | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; Health Related Quality of Life | Those at risk had increased anxiety at 1 year follow-up. No differences on quality of life. | 2019; Taghizadeh et al[ |
| Pancreatic | 129 | Intrusive thoughts and worry about cancer | Intrusive thoughts about cancer decreased at 3 and 12 months post screening. Cancer worry decreased at 3 months and increased slightly at 12 months. | 2012; Hart et al[ |
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| Multiple myeloma | 552 | Generalized Anxiety Disorder 7-item scale; Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item scale; Short-Form General Health Survey 12 Item | Patients in treatment for multiple myeloma reported higher depression and lower quality of life than those diagnosed with a precursor. No difference in anxiety levels between groups. | 2019; Maatouk et al[ |
| BRCA1/2 gene | 65 | semistructured diagnostic interview | BRCA1/2 carriers were more likely to report PTSD symptoms as a result of screening compared to noncarriers. | 2005; Hamann et al[ |
| BRCA1/2 gene | 117 | Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale | Females with the BRCA1/2 mutation reported significantly higher depression at 1 and 6 months after results. The pattern held at 12 months but was not significant. | 2008; Beran et al[ |
| Mental health effects of false-positive cancer diagnosis | ||||
| Lung | 2812 | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory; Health Related Quality of Life | Participants receiving false-positive results experienced no significant differences in anxiety or quality of life compared to those with a negative result (measured at 1 and 6 months) | 2014; Gareen et al[ |
| Prostate, lung, colorectal, and ovarian; PLCO | 432 | Health Related Quality of Life | Participants who received abnormal screening results reported worsening health related quality of life in the short term, but not intermediate term | 2004; Taylor et al[ |
| Colorectal cancer | 301 | State-Trait Anxiety Inventory | those with abnormal results (n = 165) had an increase in anxiety and doubtfulness about the decision to be screened, which decreased over time- especially once results were corrected | 2014; Bobridge et al[ |
| Breast | 285 | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | A short-term increase in anxiety symptoms was associated with false-positive screening results for breast cancer, though effect sizes were small. No difference was found 3 and 12 months following the false-positive results compared to women with clear screening results | 2001; Lampic et al[ |
| Breast | 128 | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | Those with false-positive results reported higher levels of depressive symptoms at the follow-up appointment, compared to baseline. These increased levels of depressive symptoms were maintained at 3- and 6-month follow-ups. | 2012; Hafslund et al[ |
| Mental health effects of a cancer diagnosis | ||||
| Meta-analysis including breast, lung, ovarian, pancreatic cancer and more | 58 studies | Varied | Those with cancer slightly more likely to report depression than general population. Those with less life-threatening cancers reported less depression. | 1997; van’t Spijker et al[ |
| Meta-analysis | 25 studies | Varied | PTSD symptoms more common in those with cancer diagnosis. PTSD symptoms were higher in those with more advanced stage cancers. | 2015; Abbey et al[ |
| Any type | 1154 | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale | People with cancer report higher levels of clinically significant anxiety and depression 6 and 12 months after diagnosis, with anxiety decreasing between timepoints and depression staying consistent. | 2013; Boyes et al[ |
| Any type | 5889 | Standardized computer-assisted Composite International Diagnostic Interview for mental disorders adapted for cancer patients | 32% of people with a cancer diagnosis had a current mental disorder. | 2014; Mehnert et al[ |
| Any type | 4,722,099 | Mortality/Suicide Risk | Patients with cancer are at 20% increased risk of suicide compared to general population. | 2012; Henson et al[ |
| Any type | 6073,240 | Immediate suicide following cancer diagnosis | Those with a cancer diagnosis were at increased risk of dying by suicide within the first week postdiagnosis (12.6%) or year (3.1%) compared to those without a cancer diagnosis | 2012; Fang et al[ |