Depression and cancer mortality: a meta-analysis
Philipps University of Marburg · University of Rochester Medical Center
Abstract
The goal of the present study was to analyze associations between depression and mortality of cancer patients and to test whether these associations would vary by study characteristics. METHOD: Meta-analysis was used for integrating the results of 105 samples derived from 76 prospective studies.
Depression diagnosis and higher levels of depressive symptoms predicted elevated mortality. This was true in studies that assessed depression before cancer diagnosis as well as in studies that assessed depression following cancer diagnosis. Associations between depression and mortality persisted after controlling for confounding medical variables. The depression-mortality association was weaker in studies that had longer intervals between assessments of depression and mortality, in younger samples and in studies that used the Beck Depression Inventory as compared with other depression scales.
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 15.46
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 111
Authors
2Topics & keywords
- Depression (economics)
- Confounding
- Medicine
- Cancer
- Beck Depression Inventory
- Meta-analysis
- Mental health
- Psychiatry
- Good health and well-being