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Impact of chemotherapy on anxiety, depression, and suicidality amongst testicular cancer survivors

Authors :
Tyler J. Nelson
Margaret F Meagher
Austin Leonard
Isabella Dolendo
Leah N. Deshler
Kylie M. Morgan
Elizabeth A. Duran
Daniel Sabater Minarim
Luke Wang
Jacob Taylor
Daniel Herchenhorn
Tyler F. Stewart
Juan Javier-Desloges
Amir Salmasi
Rana R. McKay
Fred Millard
Brent S Rose
Aditya Bagrodia
Source :
Journal of Clinical Oncology. 41:418-418
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
American Society of Clinical Oncology (ASCO), 2023.

Abstract

418 Background: Chemotherapy for testicular cancer (TC) is highly effective yet associated with significant consequences on long-term health-related quality of life. We evaluate the impact of chemotherapy on anxiety, depression, and suicidality amongst TC survivors. Methods: We conducted a retrospective cohort study of US veterans diagnosed with TC in the Veterans Health Affairs database from 1990-2016. Patients with non-primary germ cell tumor histologies were excluded. Baseline disease characteristics and treatment received were ascertained from the VA Central Cancer Registry. Anxiety or depression was a composite endpoint comprised of diagnosis codes for anxiety, depression, or administration of medications used to treat these diagnoses. Incident suicidality was defined as a diagnosis code for suicidal ideation. Time to event was defined as time from diagnosis to event or censor at the time of last follow-up. Rates of outcomes were reported through cumulative incidences. Associations with outcomes and receipt of chemotherapy were assessed through multivariable Cox regression models. Results: In total, 1684 patients (1174 seminoma, 510 nonseminoma) were included in the cohort. Median age at diagnosis in the cohort was 40 years old. Median follow up time was 7.67 years for surviving patients. 1506 (89.4%) patients were white, 114 (6.8%) were African American, and 64 (3.8%) were another or unknown race. There were 1066 (63.3%) stage I patients, 191 (11.3%) stage II, 198 (11.8%) stage III, and 229 (13.6%) unknown stage patients. 579 (34.4%) patients received chemotherapy. At the time of diagnosis, 104 (6.2%) patients already experienced anxiety or depression. At 10 years, cumulative incidence of the diagnosis of anxiety or depression as 44.1% in the entire cohort. At 10 years, cumulative incidence of the diagnosis of suicidality was 5.5%. On multivariable Cox regression, factors associated with a higher risk of anxiety or depression were older age at diagnosis (Hazard Ratio (HR): 1.11 per standard deviation increase, p=0.01), being unemployed (HR: 1.25, p=0.01), and receipt of chemotherapy (HR: 1.43, p

Subjects

Subjects :
Cancer Research
Oncology

Details

ISSN :
15277755 and 0732183X
Volume :
41
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Clinical Oncology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........d30f445217aaa89471264d7ef70e8de1
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1200/jco.2023.41.6_suppl.418