Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-gbm5v Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T13:59:20.919Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Mental health care in oncology. Contemporary perspective on the psychosocial burden of cancer and evidence-based interventions

Part of: Editorials

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  09 January 2020

R. Caruso*
Affiliation:
Department of Biomedical and Specialty Surgical Sciences, Institute of Psychiatry, University of Ferrara, Ferrara, Italy
W. Breitbart
Affiliation:
Department of Psychiatry & Behavioral Sciences, Jimmie C. Holland Chair in Psychiatric Oncology, Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center, New York, NY, USA
*
Author for correspondence: Rosangela Caruso, E-mail: [email protected]
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

With cancer incidence increasing over time worldwide, attention to the burden of psychiatric and psychosocial consequences of the disease is now mandatory for both cancer and mental health care professionals. Psychiatric disorders have been shown to affect at least 30–35% of cancer patients during all phases of the disease trajectory, and differ in nature according to stage and type of cancer. Other clinically relevant distressing psychosocial and existential conditions (e.g. demoralisation, health anxiety, loss of meaning and existential distress) not included as ‘disorders’ in the usual diagnostic and nosological systems (i.e. meta-diagnostic conditions) have also been shown to be present in another 15–20% of cancer patients. In this editorial, we will present a summary of the extensive literature regarding the epidemiology of the several psychosocial disorders affecting cancer patients as a cause of distress and burden to be taken into consideration and addressed in cancer care through evidence-based intervention.

Type
Editorial
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
Copyright © The Author(s) 2020

Introduction

Over the past 70 years, extensive research in oncology has demonstrated that cancer has significant psychosocial consequences for both the patients and the family in terms of psychiatric and psychosocial morbidity influencing the overall burden of the disease (Girgis et al., Reference Girgis, Lambert, Johnson, Waller and Currow2013; Caruso et al., Reference Caruso, Nanni, Riba, Sabato and Grassi2017; Mehnert et al., Reference Mehnert, Hartung, Friedrich, Vehling, Brähler, Härter, Keller, Schulz, Wegscheider, Weis, Koch and Faller2018). When the usual nosological systems of psychiatric classification (e.g. the International Classification of Disease – ICD, of the World Health Organization or the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders – DSM, of the American Psychiatric Association) are employed the rate of psychiatric morbidity is about one out of three patients (Mitchell et al., Reference Mitchell, Chan, Bhatti, Halton, Grassi, Johansen and Meader2011). Data regarding cancer populations both in Northern (Mehnert et al., Reference Mehnert, Brähler, Faller, Härter, Keller, Schulz, Wegscheider, Weis, Boehncke, Hund, Reuter, Richard, Sehner, Sommerfeldt, Szalai, Wittchen and Koch2014; Kuhnt et al., Reference Kuhnt, Brähler, Faller, Härter, Keller, Schulz, Wegscheider, Weis, Boehncke, Hund, Reuter, Richard, Sehner, Wittchen, Koch and Mehnert2016) and Southern Europe (Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Sabato, Rossi, Marmai and Biancosino2009; Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Caruso, Mitchell, Sabato and Nanni2018) confirm that 35–40% of cancer patients have a diagnosable psychiatric disorder according to the ICD-10 psychiatric interview. These figures are higher among cancer patients with advanced stages of cancer and in palliative care settings (Breitbart and Alici, Reference Breitbart and Alici2014; Jaiswal et al., Reference Jaiswal, Alici and Breitbart2014), but not much lower among cancer survivors, in whom the burden of having had cancer has typically been expected to decrease over time. In fact, data show that about one-third of cancer survivors continue to suffer from psychiatric disorders (Geue et al., Reference Geue, Brähler, Faller, Härter, Schulz, Weis, Koch, Wittchen and Mehnert2018) with a risk two to three times higher than control health groups and higher than the general population in terms of depressive and anxious symptomatology (Götze et al., Reference Götze, Friedrich, Taubenheim, Dietz, Lordick and Mehnert2019; Kuba et al., Reference Kuba, Esser, Mehnert, Hinz, Johansen, Lordick and Götze2019).

The characterisation of psychosocial morbidity in cancer

When examining the characteristic psychiatric diagnoses amongst cancer patients, some disorders are more common than others, such as depression, trauma/stress-related disorders and anxiety disorders. More recently, other conditions, including sub-threshold and clinically significant psychosocial/existential syndromes, not included as disorders, and thus not detectable by using ICD or DSM systems, have been identified as significant sources of distress and psychological burden for many cancer patients.

Depressive spectrum disorders

Depressive spectrum disorders are extremely common in cancer, although their prevalence varies considerably depending on the studies, the treatment settings (outpatient clinics, hospital and palliative care settings), the stage of cancer (early diagnosis, recurrence, survivorship or advanced stages) and the type of assessment methods and tools used to determine caseness (e.g. self-report tools v. psychiatric interviews) (Walker et al., Reference Walker, Holm Hansen, Martin, Sawhney, Thekkumpurath, Beale, Symeonides, Wall, Murray and Sharpe2013; Krebber et al., Reference Krebber, Buffart, Kleijn, Riepma, de Bree, Leemans, Becker, Brug, van Straten, Cuijpers and Verdonck-de Leeuw2014; Caruso et al., Reference Caruso, Nanni, Riba, Sabato and Grassi2017). With regards to major depression, the debate related to diagnostic problems has been very intense, because of the limits of a categorical approach and the need to understand the diagnostic specificity of physical v. psychological symptoms (affective v. neurovegetative) in the clinical manifestation of the disorder. For example, in palliative care, a marked reduction in performance, pain and fatigue, as well as loss of a vision of the future, make it difficult to differentiate major depression from other depressive spectrum disorders (Rayner et al., Reference Rayner, Loge, Wasteson and Higginson2009; Wasteson et al., Reference Wasteson, Brenne, Higginson, Hotopf, Lloyd-Williams, Kaasa and Loge2009; Fairman and Irwin, Reference Fairman and Irwin2013; Janberidze et al., Reference Janberidze, Hjermstad, Haugen, Sigurdardottir, Løhre, Lie, Kaasa and Knudsen2014). Clarification is also needed with respect to other forms of depression categorised in DSM-5 and ICD-10, such as minor depression, recurrent brief depression and anxious-depressive syndrome including sub-threshold and anxious-depressive, provided it is useful to use these categories in the context of cancer care (Mitchell et al., Reference Mitchell, Meader, Davies, Clover, Crater, Loscalzo, Linden, Grassi, Johansen, Carlson and Zabora2012).

Anxiety disorders and trauma/stress-related disorders

Regarding anxiety disorders, specific phobias (in particular those related to well-known phenomena such as chemotherapy induced anticipatory nausea and vomiting, overlapping to the mechanisms of classic phobias) are common in cancer care, particularly after chemotherapy.

Trauma/stress-related disorders include post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and sub-syndromic forms of PTSD hat has also shown to affect 15% of cancer patients (Cordova et al., Reference Cordova, Riba and Spiegel2017) with a smaller percentage, but still significant, in long-survivors of cancer [at least 5 years after diagnosis (Rustad et al., Reference Rustad, David and Currier2012)]. These data should be taken into consideration when analysing some aspects of PTSD in cancer diseases, such as the impossibility to define qualitative (exogenous stressors v. endogenous stressors) and temporal criteria (acute stressor in PTSD v. continuing and multiple stressful events in cancer).

Adjustment disorders (ADs) represent a frequent diagnosis at all stages of cancer, and describe the emotional reactions related to the multiple stressors linked to cancer, involving 20–25% of patients. Anxiety as well as depression can be also components of AD depression with intertwining effects in the manifestation of both conditions. However, several different problems emerge, not only with regards to oncology but all medical conditions, because of the low specificity of DSM criteria for the diagnosis of AD, the vagueness of the symptoms, the weakness of the concept of distress v. the expected normal response, and the inconsistency and inadequacy of using time as a criterion (Casey, Reference Casey2014; Bachem and Casey, Reference Bachem and Casey2018).

Somatisation and somatic-symptom disorders

Somatisation and somatic-symptom disorders and their role in influencing patients' well-being are also important, not only because of its prevalence especially in long-survivors of cancer, but also in general for the multiple relationships between the perception of somatic symptoms and the patient's interpretation. Pain intensity, hypochondriacal concerns, disease labelling and dysfunctional interpretation of somatic symptoms, are part of a complex picture related to illness and abnormal illness behaviour; ways in which individuals adaptively or maladaptively monitor their body, experience, evaluate and respond to their state of health. All these issues have a significant role in cancer care, since somatic symptoms may magnify disability resulting from cancer, interfere with treatment adherence, decision making, cause delay in recovery, result in poor outcomes and recurrence, and reduce overall well-being and quality of life, and complicate the diagnosis of major depression (due to the overlap of symptoms occurring as a result of the underlying disease, depression or somatoform disorders) (Chaturvedi et al., Reference Chaturvedi, Maguire and Somashekar2006; Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Caruso and Nanni2013).

Neurocognitive disorders

Neurocognitive disorders represent an important clinical area in terms of mild (sometimes major) cognitive impairment or acute confusional states (delirium) secondary to the disease and its treatment. Mild neurocognitive disorders can be secondary to chemotherapy or chemotherapy associated with radiation therapy which can cause impairment of neuropsychological domains, such as memory, attention, concentration, learning functions, calculation and visual-spatial perception (Wigmore, Reference Wigmore2013). Other cognitive impairment conditions, including dementia (especially in patients undergoing radiotherapy of the brain for the treatment of brain metastases) are estimated to be 2–5%. They could be caused by primary disease (e.g. primary brain tumours) or by the consequences of cancer treatments on the central nervous system (CNS). Brain metastases can also induce psychopathological disorders, in particular memory impairment associated with personality modification, as well as aphasia, alexia, acalculia, agnosia, apraxia, amnesia and mood disorders (Soussain et al., Reference Soussain, Ricard, Fike, Mazeron, Psimaras and Delattre2009).

A special area of interest is represented by delirium, one of the most common cognitive disorders in cancer, particularly in the advanced stages of disease. Delirium prevalence, depending on stage of disease, ranges from 10 to 80%, including both the hyperactive-agitated and mixed forms, although hypoactive delirium is most common in advanced cancer (Stagno et al., Reference Stagno, Gibson and Breitbart2004; Breitbart and Alici, Reference Breitbart and Alici2012, Reference Breitbart and Alici2014; Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Caraceni, Mitchell, Nanni, Berardi, Caruso and Riba2015; Hey et al., Reference Hey, Hosker, Ward, Kite and Speechley2015; Lawlor and Bush, Reference Lawlor and Bush2015).

Other psychosocial clinically significant disorders

Apart from the aforesaid psychiatric disorders, as emerging from the DSM and the ICD nosography, other significant clinical conditions have been shown to negatively affect the patient's quality of life. Research based on the use of the Diagnostic Criteria for Psychosomatic Research as well as other tools has indicated the importance of assessing a series of dimensions and emotional responses, such as demoralisation, loss of meaning, existential distress, irritable mood, health anxiety and illness denial that can all be of impact in oncology patients. Health anxiety (37.7%) and demoralisation (28.8%) are for example the most frequent clinically relevant psychosocial conditions diagnosable in cancer patients in different phases of illness (Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Sabato, Rossi, Biancosino and Marmai2005). Demoralisation, as a syndrome characterised by helplessness, hopelessness, a sense of failure and the inability to cope, has been shown to be associated with higher levels of sadness, more physical symptoms, poorer well-being, poorer leisure activity and lower support from interpersonal ties, higher levels of worries and preoccupation related to cancer (e.g. the illness itself, the effects of treatment, feeling different from others, the impact on sexual life, the future) as well as loss of meaning and hope, poor dignity, a sense of worthlessness on one's own life and in the future and suicidal ideation (Grassi and Nanni, Reference Grassi and Nanni2016).

Sexual disorders and dysfunctions

Sexual disorders and dysfunctions are also part of the possible psychiatric diagnoses in cancer involving an average of 25–40% of cancer patients, both in male and female cancer patients (Morreale, Reference Morreale2011). Patients with breast cancer, ovary cancer and uterine cancer show a decrease or loss of sexual drive, changes in female genital response (decrease or loss of lubrication), orgasm problems, and vaginismus and dyspareunia. Similarly, male patients show that testicular and prostate cancer have shown to report important consequences on sexuality, in particular low sexual drive, performance anxiety, premature ejaculation, erectile dysfunction and inhibition of orgasm (Chung and Brock, Reference Chung and Brock2013; Chung and Gillman, Reference Chung and Gillman2014; Katz and Dizon, Reference Katz and Dizon2016). Body image changes, the effects of chemo- and radiation therapy at a systemic level as well as on the reproductive tract; weight loss, stomas (e.g. ostomy and colostomy), the consequences of surgery and incontinence are the main causal factors of these disorders.

Evidenced-based psychiatric and psycho-social interventions

Knowledge about the treatment of psychosocial and psychiatric conditions is mandatory for cancer care clinicians, given the number of studies that have shown the efficacy and effectiveness of psychosocial interventions (Faller et al., Reference Faller, Schuler, Richard, Heckl, Weis and Küffner2013; Myrhaug et al., Reference Myrhaug, Mbalilaki, Lie, Hansen and Nordvik2018). Counselling, educational, coping and psychological support, and more specific forms of psychotherapy in their different formats (group, individual and family therapy) and orientations (cognitive-behavioural, supportive-expressive, existential, meaning-centred and psychodynamic) have been developed for cancer patients in order to more specifically intervene in all the conditions where psychological disorders and maladjustment to cancer and treatment emerge. The choice of intervention is related to several variables, including the clinical psychological condition, the type and phase of illness, the context, as well as the availability of psycho-oncology services with trained professionals which should be part of multidisciplinary teams.

The literature on the efficacy of the several forms of specialised psychotherapeutic interventions and psychosocial rehabilitation, especially if in the form of collaborative care, indicates a general benefit in reducing the severity of psychiatric symptoms, as well as somatic symptoms (e.g. pain) and in improving quality of life, well-being and return to work and illness behaviour (Li et al., Reference Li, Kennedy, Byrne, Gérin-Lajoie, Katz, Keshavarz, Sellick and Green2017). The interventions, with the most empirical support for treating distress in cancer patients include supportive-expressive group psychotherapy, cognitive-behavioural and cognitive-existential therapy, and meaning centred psychotherapy (Breitbart, Reference Breitbart2017; Kang et al., Reference Kang, Han, Lim and Kim2019)

Integrated psychopharmacological intervention (psychopharm-oncology) (Grassi and Riba, Reference Grassi and Riba2014) has also shown to be efficacious in several disorders, where the use of specific serotonin reuptake inhibitors; specific noradrenergic and serotonin reuptake inhibitors have been shown to help both in treating depression and anxiety and cancer-related symptoms, such as pain, hot-flashes and pain (Caruso et al., Reference Caruso, Grassi, Nanni and Riba2013; Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Caruso, Hammelef, Nanni and Riba2014). With respect to this it is important for clinicians, usually psychiatrists, but also oncologists and primary care physicians to have a proper training on the use of the drugs, their side-effects and interaction with other cancer treatment in oncology (Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Caruso, Mitchell, Sabato and Nanni2018). There is however an urgent need for a systemic approach to the development and conduction of multidisciplinary integrated psychosocial interventions, based on both guidelines and larger and more rigorously conducted randomised controlled trials.

Conclusions

Cancer has significant psychosocial consequences for both patients and their families. Today there is scientific evidence of the benefits of providing psychosocial cancer care as part of standard care in reducing distress and psychosocial morbidity associated with cancer and in fostering a better quality of life during and after treatment, and eventually in increasing survival. The significant advances in research in the area of psycho-oncology have favoured the development, implementation and dissemination of psychosocial guidelines and evidence-based treatments for several co-morbid psychiatric disorders in cancer, such as depression (Li et al., Reference Li, Kennedy, Byrne, Gérin-Lajoie, Katz, Keshavarz, Sellick and Green2017) and anxiety (Traeger et al., Reference Traeger, Greer, Fernandez-Robles, Temel and Pirl2012). Screening, identification and access to evidence-based psychosocial approaches for cancer patients in distress must be provided, both in the hospital and in community settings (Lazenby, Reference Lazenby, Tan, Pasacreta, Ercolano and McCorkle2015; Andersen and Dorfman, Reference Andersen and Dorfman2016; Grassi et al., Reference Grassi, Nanni, Rodin, Li and Caruso2018). Besides specific cancer care specialists, primary care should also take responsibility in its role of provision of continuous, coordinated and comprehensive care for individuals with cancer and families. This should include psychosocial care, prevention and diagnosis, in shared follow-up and survivorship care and end-of-life care (Rubin et al., Reference Rubin, Berendsen, Crawford, Dommett, Earle, Emery, Fahey, Grassi, Grunfeld, Gupta, Hamilton, Hiom, Hunter, Lyratzopoulos, Macleod, Mason, Mitchell, Neal, Peake, Roland, Seifert, Sisler, Sussman, Taplin, Vedsted, Voruganti, Walter, Wardle, Watson, Weller, Wender, Whelan, Whitlock, Wilkinson, de Wit and Zimmermann2015).

Acknowledgement

None.

Financial support

None.

Conflict of interest

None.

References

Andersen, BL and Dorfman, CS (2016) Evidence-based psychosocial treatment in the community: considerations for dissemination and implementation. Psycho-Oncology 25, 482490.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Bachem, R and Casey, P (2018) Adjustment disorder: a diagnosis whose time has come. Journal of Affective Disorders 227, 243–225.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Breitbart, W (ed.) (2017) Meaning-Centered Psychotherapy in the Cancer Setting: Finding Meaning and Hope in the Face of Suffering. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Breitbart, W and Alici, Y (2012) Evidence-based treatment of delirium in patients with cancer. Journal of Clinical Oncology 30, 12061214.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Breitbart, W and Alici, Y (2014) Psychosocial Palliative Care. New York: Oxford University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caruso, R, Grassi, L, Nanni, MG and Riba, M (2013) Psychopharmacology in psycho-oncology. Current Psychiatry Reports 15, 393.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Caruso, R, Nanni, MG, Riba, MB, Sabato, S and Grassi, L (2017) The burden of psychosocial morbidity related to cancer: patient and family issues. International Review of Psychiatry 29, 389402.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Casey, P (2014) Adjustment disorder: new developments. Current Psychiatry Reports 16, 451.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chaturvedi, SK, Maguire, P and Somashekar, BS (2006) Somatization in cancer. International Review of Psychiatry 18, 4954.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chung, E and Brock, G (2013) Sexual rehabilitation and cancer survivorship: a state of art review of current literature and management strategies in male sexual dysfunction among prostate cancer survivors. The Journal of Sexual Medicine 10(suppl. 1), 102111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Chung, E and Gillman, M (2014) Prostate cancer survivorship: a review of erectile dysfunction and penile rehabilitation after prostate cancer therapy. Medical Journal of Australia 200, 582585.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Cordova, MJ, Riba, MB and Spiegel, D (2017) Post-traumatic stress disorder and cancer. The Lancet. Psychiatry 4, 330338.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Fairman, N and Irwin, SA (2013) Palliative care psychiatry: update on an emerging dimension of psychiatric practice. Current Psychiatry Reports 15, 374.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Faller, H, Schuler, M, Richard, M, Heckl, U, Weis, J and Küffner, R (2013) Effects of psycho-oncologic interventions on emotional distress and quality of life in adult patients with cancer: systematic review and meta-analysis. Journal of Clinical Oncology 31, 782793.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Geue, K, Brähler, E, Faller, H, Härter, M, Schulz, H, Weis, J, Koch, U, Wittchen, HU and Mehnert, A (2018) Prevalence of mental disorders and psychosocial distress in German adolescent and young adult cancer patients (AYA). Psycho-Oncology 27, 18021809.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Girgis, A, Lambert, S, Johnson, C, Waller, A and Currow, D (2013) Physical, psychosocial, relationship, and economic burden of caring for people with cancer: a review. Journal of Oncology Practice 9, 197202.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Götze, H, Friedrich, M, Taubenheim, S, Dietz, A, Lordick, F and Mehnert, A (2019) Depression and anxiety in long-term survivors 5 and 10 years after cancer diagnosis. Supportive Care in Cancer 28, 211220.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassi, L and Nanni, MG (2016) Demoralization syndrome: New insights in psychosocial cancer care. Cancer 122, 21302133.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassi, L and Riba, M (eds) (2014) Psychopharmacology in Oncology and Palliative Care. Berlin/New York: Springer.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grassi, L, Sabato, S, Rossi, E, Marmai, L and Biancosino, B (2009) Affective syndromes and their screening in cancer patients with early and stable disease: Italian ICD-10 data and performance of the distress thermometer from the Southern European Psycho-Oncology Study (SEPOS). Journal of Affective Disorders 114, 193199.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grassi, L, Sabato, S, Rossi, E, Biancosino, B and Marmai, L (2005) Use of the diagnostic criteria for psychosomatic research in oncology. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 74, 100107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grassi, L, Caruso, R and Nanni, MG (2013) Somatization and somatic symptom presentation in cancer: a neglected area. International Review of Psychiatry 25, 4151.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassi, L, Caruso, R, Hammelef, K, Nanni, MG and Riba, M (2014) Efficacy and safety of pharmacotherapy in cancer-related psychiatric disorders across the trajectory of cancer care: a review. International Review of Psychiatry 26, 4462.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassi, L, Caraceni, A, Mitchell, AJ, Nanni, MG, Berardi, MA, Caruso, R and Riba, M (2015) Management of delirium in palliative care: a review. Current Psychiatry Reports 17, 550.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Grassi, L, Caruso, R, Mitchell, AJ, Sabato, S and Nanni, MG (2018) Screening for emotional disorders in patients with cancer using the Brief Symptom Inventory (BSI) and the BSI-18 versus a standardized psychiatric interview (the World Health Organization Composite International Diagnostic Interview). Cancer 124, 2415–2242.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Grassi, L, Nanni, MG, Rodin, G, Li, M and Caruso, R (2018) The use of antidepressants in oncology: a review and practical tips for oncologists. Annals of Oncology 29, 101111.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Hey, J, Hosker, C, Ward, J, Kite, S and Speechley, H (2015) Delirium in palliative care: detection, documentation and management in three settings. Palliative & Supportive Care 13, 15411545.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Jaiswal, R, Alici, Y and Breitbart, W (2014) A comprehensive review of palliative care in patients with cancer. International Review of Psychiatry 26, 87101.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Janberidze, E, Hjermstad, MJ, Haugen, DF, Sigurdardottir, KR, Løhre, ET, Lie, HC, Kaasa, S, Knudsen, AK and EURO IMPACT (2014) How are patient populations characterized in studies investigating depression in advanced cancer? Results from a systematic literature review. Journal of Pain and Symptom Management 48, 678698.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kang, KA, Han, SJ, Lim, YS and Kim, SJ (2019) Meaning-centered interventions for patients with advanced or terminal cancer: a meta-analysis. Cancer Nursing 42, 332340.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Katz, A and Dizon, DS (2016) Sexuality after cancer: a model for male survivors. Journal of Sexual Medicine 13, 7078.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krebber, AM, Buffart, LM, Kleijn, G, Riepma, IC, de Bree, R, Leemans, CR, Becker, A, Brug, J, van Straten, A, Cuijpers, P and Verdonck-de Leeuw, IM (2014) Prevalence of depression in cancer patients: a meta-analysis of diagnostic interviews and self-report instruments. Psycho-Oncology 23, 121130.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuba, K, Esser, P, Mehnert, A, Hinz, A, Johansen, C, Lordick, F and Götze, H (2019) Risk for depression and anxiety in long-term survivors of hematologic cancer. Health Psychology 38, 187195.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Kuhnt, S, Brähler, E, Faller, H, Härter, M, Keller, M, Schulz, H, Wegscheider, K, Weis, J, Boehncke, A, Hund, B, Reuter, K, Richard, M, Sehner, S, Wittchen, HU, Koch, U and Mehnert, A (2016) Twelve-month and lifetime prevalence of mental disorders in cancer patients. Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics 85, 289296.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lawlor, PG and Bush, SH (2015) Delirium in patients with cancer: assessment, impact, mechanisms and management. Nature Reviews Clinical Oncology 12, 7792.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Lazenby, M, Tan, H, Pasacreta, N, Ercolano, E and McCorkle, R (2015) The five steps of comprehensive psychosocial distress screening. Current Oncology Reports 17, 447.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Li, M, Kennedy, EB, Byrne, N, Gérin-Lajoie, C, Katz, MR, Keshavarz, H, Sellick, S and Green, E (2017) Systematic review and meta-analysis of collaborative care interventions or depression in patients with cancer. Psycho-Oncology 26, 573587.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mehnert, A, Brähler, E, Faller, H, Härter, M, Keller, M, Schulz, H, Wegscheider, K, Weis, J, Boehncke, A, Hund, B, Reuter, K, Richard, M, Sehner, S, Sommerfeldt, S, Szalai, C, Wittchen, HU and Koch, U (2014) Four-week prevalence of mental disorders in patients with cancer across major tumor entities. Journal of Clinical Oncology 32, 35403546.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mehnert, A, Hartung, TJ, Friedrich, M, Vehling, S, Brähler, E, Härter, M, Keller, M, Schulz, H, Wegscheider, K, Weis, J, Koch, U and Faller, H (2018) One in two cancer patients is significantly distressed: prevalence and indicators of distress. Psycho-Oncology 27, 7582.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, AJ, Chan, M, Bhatti, H, Halton, M, Grassi, L, Johansen, C and Meader, N (2011) Prevalence of depression, anxiety, and adjustment disorder in oncological, haematological, and palliative-care settings: a meta-analysis. The Lancet Oncology 12, 160174.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Mitchell, AJ, Meader, N, Davies, E, Clover, C, Crater, G, Loscalzo, M, Linden, W, Grassi, L, Johansen, C, Carlson, L and Zabora, J (2012) Meta-analysis of screening and case finding tools for depression in cancer: evidence based recommendations for clinical practice on behalf of the DCC Consensus Group. Journal of Affective Disorders 140, 149160.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Morreale, MK (2011) The impact of cancer on sexual function. Advances in Psychosomatic Medicine 31, 7282.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Myrhaug, HT, Mbalilaki, JA, Lie, NK, Hansen, T and Nordvik, JE (2018) The effects of multidisciplinary psychosocial interventions on adult cancer patients: a systematic review and meta-analysis. Disability and Rehabilitation 29, 19.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rayner, L, Loge, JH, Wasteson, E, Higginson, IJ and EPCRC, European Palliative Care Research Collaborative (2009) The detection of depression in palliative care. Current Opinion in Supportive and Palliative Care 3, 5556CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rubin, G, Berendsen, A, Crawford, SM, Dommett, R, Earle, C, Emery, J, Fahey, T, Grassi, L, Grunfeld, E, Gupta, S, Hamilton, W, Hiom, S, Hunter, D, Lyratzopoulos, G, Macleod, U, Mason, R, Mitchell, G, Neal, RD, Peake, M, Roland, M, Seifert, B, Sisler, J, Sussman, J, Taplin, S, Vedsted, P, Voruganti, T, Walter, F, Wardle, J, Watson, E, Weller, D, Wender, R, Whelan, J, Whitlock, J, Wilkinson, C, de Wit, N and Zimmermann, C (2015) The expanding role of primary care in cancer control. The Lancet Oncology 16, 12311272.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Rustad, JK, David, D and Currier, MB (2012) Cancer and post-traumatic stress disorder: diagnosis, pathogenesis and treatment considerations. Palliative and Supportive Care 10, 213223.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Soussain, C, Ricard, D, Fike, JR, Mazeron, JJ, Psimaras, D and Delattre, JY (2009) CNS Complications of radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Lancet 374, 16391651.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Stagno, D, Gibson, C and Breitbart, W (2004) The delirium subtypes: a review of prevalence, phenomenology, pathophysiology, and treatment response. Palliative and Supportive Care 2, 171179.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Traeger, L, Greer, JA, Fernandez-Robles, C, Temel, JS and Pirl, WF (2012) Evidence-based treatment of anxiety in patients with cancer. Journal of Clinical Oncology 30, 11971205.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Walker, J, Holm Hansen, C, Martin, P, Sawhney, A, Thekkumpurath, P, Beale, C, Symeonides, S, Wall, L, Murray, G and Sharpe, M (2013) Prevalence of depression in adults with cancer: a systematic review. Annals of Oncology 24, 895900.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wasteson, E, Brenne, E, Higginson, IJ, Hotopf, M, Lloyd-Williams, M, Kaasa, S, Loge, JH and European Palliative Care Research Collaborative (EPCRC) (2009) Depression assessment and classification in palliative cancer patients: a systematic literature review. Palliative Medicine 23, 739753CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
Wigmore, P (2013) The effect of systemic chemotherapy on neurogenesis, plasticity and memory. Current Topics in Behavioral Neurosciences 15, 211240.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed