Lee Morgan, Jim Heather S, Fishman Mayer, Zachariah Babu, Heysek Randy, Biagioli Matthew, Jacobsen Paul B
Department of Psychology, University of South Florida, Tampa, FL, USA; Department of Health Outcomes and Behavior, Moffitt Cancer Center, Tampa, FL, USA.
Psychooncology. 2015 Apr;24(4):472-7. doi: 10.1002/pon.3608. Epub 2014 Jun 13.
Prostate cancer patients who receive androgen deprivation therapy (ADT) often experience many physical and psychological side effects. ADT may be associated with increased risk for depression, but the relationship between ADT and depression is not fully understood. This study used a longitudinal design to assess depressive symptomatology in patients receiving ADT compared with two groups of matched controls.
Participants were men initiating ADT treatment (ADT+ group; n = 61) and their matched controls: prostate cancer patients treated with radical prostatectomy (ADT- group; n = 61), and no-cancer controls (CA- group; n = 61). Depressive symptomatology was assessed using the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale at ADT initiation and again 6 months later. Differences in depressive symptomatology and rates of clinically significant depressive symptomatology were analyzed between groups at each time point and within groups over time.
Between baseline and follow-up, ADT+ participants demonstrated increased depressive symptomatology and increased rates of clinically significant depressive symptomatology (ps < 0.05). ADT+ participants also reported greater depressive symptomatology than both control groups at follow-up (ps < 0.001). Rates of clinically significant depressive symptomatology were higher in the ADT+ group than the ADT- and CA- groups at both time points (baseline: 28%, 5%, 12%; follow-up: 39%, 9%, 11%).
Findings support the hypothesis that ADT administration yields increases in depression and suggest that the mechanism behind ADT's association with depression should be explored and that prostate cancer patients treated with ADT should receive particular focus in depression screening and intervention.
接受雄激素剥夺治疗(ADT)的前列腺癌患者常经历多种生理和心理副作用。ADT可能与抑郁症风险增加有关,但ADT与抑郁症之间的关系尚未完全明确。本研究采用纵向设计,评估接受ADT治疗的患者与两组匹配对照组相比的抑郁症状。
参与者为开始ADT治疗的男性(ADT+组;n = 61)及其匹配对照组:接受根治性前列腺切除术治疗的前列腺癌患者(ADT-组;n = 61)和无癌症对照组(CA-组;n = 61)。在开始ADT时和6个月后,使用流行病学研究中心抑郁量表评估抑郁症状。分析各时间点组间以及组内随时间变化的抑郁症状差异和具有临床意义的抑郁症状发生率。
在基线和随访之间,ADT+参与者的抑郁症状增加,具有临床意义的抑郁症状发生率也增加(p值<0.05)。在随访时,ADT+参与者报告的抑郁症状也比两个对照组更严重(p值<0.001)。在两个时间点,ADT+组具有临床意义的抑郁症状发生率均高于ADT-组和CA-组(基线:28%、5%、12%;随访:39%、9%、11%)。
研究结果支持ADT治疗会导致抑郁症增加的假设,并表明应探索ADT与抑郁症关联背后的机制,且接受ADT治疗的前列腺癌患者在抑郁症筛查和干预中应受到特别关注。