Cotter Anne R, Vuong Kim, Mustelin Linda, Yang Yi, Rakhmankulova Malika, Barclay Colleen J, Harris Russell P
University of North Carolina School of Medicine, Chapel Hill, North Carolina, USA.
Department of Public Health, University of Helsinki, Helsinki, Finland.
BMJ Open. 2017 Dec 12;7(12):e017565. doi: 10.1136/bmjopen-2017-017565.
A potential psychological harm of screening is unexpected diagnosislabelling. We need to know the frequency and severity of this harm to make informed decisions about screening. We asked whether current evidence allows an estimate of any psychological harm of labelling. As case studies, we used two conditions for which screening is common: prostate cancer (PCa) and abdominal aortic aneurysm (AAA).
Systematic review with narrative synthesis.
We searched the English language literature in PubMed, PsychINFO and Cumulative Index of Nursing and Allied Health Literature (CINAHL) for research of any design published between 1 January 2002 and 23 January 2017 that provided valid data about the psychological state of people recently diagnosed with early stage PCa or AAA. Two authors independently used explicit criteria to review and critically appraise all studies for bias, applicability and the extent to which it provided evidence about the frequency and severity of harm from labelling.
35 quantitative studies (30 of PCa and 5 of AAA) met our criteria, 17 (48.6%) of which showed possible or definite psychological harm from labelling. None of these studies, however, had either appropriate measures or relevant comparisons to estimate the frequency and severity of psychological harm. Four PCa and three AAA qualitative studies all showed clear evidence of at least moderate psychological harm from labelling. Seven population-based studies found increased suicide in patients recently diagnosed with PCa.
Although qualitative and population-based studies show that at least moderate psychological harm due to screening for PCa and AAA does occur, the current quantitative evidence is insufficient to allow a more precise estimation of frequency and severity. More sensitive measures and improved research designs are needed to fully characterise this harm. In the meantime, clinicians and recommendation panels should be aware of the occurrence of this harm.
筛查的一种潜在心理危害是意外诊断标签化。我们需要了解这种危害的频率和严重程度,以便就筛查做出明智的决策。我们探讨了现有证据是否能对标签化造成的心理危害进行评估。作为案例研究,我们选取了两种常见筛查情况:前列腺癌(PCa)和腹主动脉瘤(AAA)。
采用叙述性综合的系统评价。
我们在PubMed、PsychINFO以及护理与联合健康文献累积索引(CINAHL)中检索了2002年1月1日至2017年1月23日期间发表的任何设计的英文文献,这些文献提供了关于近期被诊断为早期PCa或AAA患者心理状态的有效数据。两位作者独立使用明确的标准对所有研究进行审查和严格评估,以判断其偏倚、适用性以及提供标签化危害频率和严重程度证据的程度。
35项定量研究(30项关于PCa,5项关于AAA)符合我们的标准,其中17项(48.6%)显示标签化可能或肯定会造成心理危害。然而,这些研究均未采用合适的测量方法或进行相关比较来估计心理危害的频率和严重程度。四项PCa定性研究和三项AAA定性研究均明确显示标签化至少会造成中度心理危害。七项基于人群的研究发现,近期被诊断为PCa的患者自杀率有所上升。
尽管定性研究和基于人群的研究表明,PCa和AAA筛查至少会造成中度心理危害,但目前的定量证据不足以更精确地估计危害的频率和严重程度。需要更敏感的测量方法和改进的研究设计来全面描述这种危害。与此同时,临床医生和推荐小组应意识到这种危害的存在。