School of Behavioral Sciences, Tel-Aviv-Yaffo Academic College, Tel-aviv, Israel.
Assuta Medical Center, Oncology Institute, Tel-aviv, Israel.
J Geriatr Oncol. 2018 Sep;9(5):476-481. doi: 10.1016/j.jgo.2018.03.011. Epub 2018 Apr 10.
Age is negatively related to depression among young and middle age patients with cancer. Nevertheless the relationship between age and depression among older patients with cancer is unclear. The goal of the current study is to assess the association of depression with increasing age among older patients with cancer.
Participants were 243 oncology out-patients, aged ≥65, either receiving treatment for active disease or within 6 months of completing treatment for active disease, with a Karnofsky score ≥70. Participants were grouped by age: "Younger-Old" - age 65-74 (N = 125); "Old" - age 75-84 (N = 49); and "Oldest-Old" -age ≥ 85 years (N = 69). Background data included: socio-demography; cancer type/staging/treatment; Charlson comorbidity index (CCI); Eastern Cooperative Oncology Group (ECOG) performance. Psychological data included: the 5-item Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS); "Distress Thermometer" (single item); and Cancer Perceived Agents of Social Support (12-item).
Depression levels were significantly higher among oldest-old participants in comparison to the old and younger-old groups: mean GDS scores were 0.93 ± 1.13, 1.27 ± 1.41 and 3.91 ± 1.35 respectively. After controlling for all potential confounders in a hierarchical logistic regression model, age-group significantly predicted both depression and distress. Receiver operating characteristic (ROC) analysis determined age 86 as the optimal cutoff for both clinical depression and distress.
Depression among older patients with cancer rises with increasing age, being extremely common among the oldest old. Age independently predicted depression, irrespective of medical variables, social support, or functional status. Findings highlight the importance of addressing the potentially unmet psychological needs of this rapidly growing patient population.
年龄与中青年癌症患者的抑郁呈负相关。然而,年龄与老年癌症患者的抑郁之间的关系尚不清楚。本研究的目的是评估老年癌症患者中抑郁与年龄增长的关系。
参与者为 243 名年龄≥65 岁的肿瘤门诊患者,正在接受活动性疾病治疗或在完成活动性疾病治疗后 6 个月内,Karnofsky 评分≥70。参与者按年龄分组:“年轻老年人”-年龄 65-74 岁(n=125);“老年人”-年龄 75-84 岁(n=49);“最老老年人”-年龄≥85 岁(n=69)。背景数据包括:社会人口统计学;癌症类型/分期/治疗;Charlson 合并症指数(CCI);东部合作肿瘤学组(ECOG)表现。心理数据包括:5 项老年抑郁量表(GDS);“痛苦温度计”(单项);癌症感知社会支持代理(12 项)。
与老年和年轻老年人组相比,最老老年人组的抑郁水平显著升高:GDS 平均得分分别为 0.93±1.13、1.27±1.41 和 3.91±1.35。在分层逻辑回归模型中控制所有潜在混杂因素后,年龄组显著预测了抑郁和痛苦。受试者工作特征(ROC)分析确定年龄 86 岁为临床抑郁和痛苦的最佳截断值。
老年癌症患者的抑郁随年龄增长而增加,在最老老年人中极为常见。年龄独立预测抑郁,与医学变量、社会支持或功能状态无关。研究结果强调了满足这一快速增长的患者群体潜在未满足的心理需求的重要性。