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Release Date: Oct. 1, 2004
CANCER STRIKES PSYCHIATRIC PATIENTS AT A YOUNGER AGE
By Ann Quigley, Contributing Writer
Health Behavior News Service
People with mental disorders develop cancer at younger ages and have higher
odds of later being diagnosed with certain cancers, including tumors of the
brain and lung, according to a new analysis of insurance claims.
“This work is the first of many steps in understanding mental health
and cancer … in insured Americans seeking mental and physical health
care,” says study author Caroline P. Carney, M.D., of the departments
of psychiatry and internal medicine at Indiana University School of Medicine
and a research scientist at the Regenstrief Institute in Indianapolis.
A number of previous studies focused on the potential relationship between
cancer and mental health disorders such as depression and schizophrenia, but
their findings were inconclusive.
Carney and colleagues examined five
years’ worth of medical claims for
more than 700,000 adult cancer patients living in the Midwest, about 10 percent
of whom had submitted mental health claims at least six months before they
submitted a cancer claim. The authors excluded patients who submitted a mental
health claim after a cancer diagnosis, in case the cancer diagnosis had influenced
their mental health.
The cancer patients who had submitted
mental health claims were more likely than those who hadn’t to be diagnosed with respiratory and brain tumors
during the study period. They also were diagnosed with cancer at significantly
younger ages than the average — two years earlier for men and three years
earlier for women. Female mental health claimants had higher odds of being
diagnosed with leukemia and lymphoma.
The results are published in the current issue of the journal Psychosomatic
Medicine.
Carney and colleagues said they were not surprised by the higher rates of
respiratory tumors among the mental health claimants. This finding is likely
related to higher smoking rates among people with mental disorders like depression
and has been noted in other studies. Because of the nature of insurance claims,
Carney and colleagues were not able to directly adjust for the effect of smoking.
“Both mental health workers and primary care providers should stress
smoking cessation programs,” Carney notes.
That brain tumors were more common
in patients with psychiatric conditions suggests that some brain tumors “may be present and causing mental symptoms
well ahead of other neurological symptoms leading to diagnostic evaluations,” Carney
says. “It is unlikely that mental disorders cause brain tumors per se.
It is more likely that the earliest symptoms of brain tumors are mental, not
neurological.”
This finding suggests “people presenting with new mental symptoms at
times of life atypical for a new onset of a psychiatric condition should undergo
evaluation for the presence of a brain tumor,” Carney says.
Carney and colleagues note several study limitations. One is that as mental
health conditions tend to be underdiagnosed, those study participants with
psychiatric conditions who did not submit claims may have skewed the study
results. Also, given the mostly white population of the Midwest, the study
results may not be applicable to other ethnicities.
This study was supported by the
American Cancer Society’s Seed Grant
program and a National Institute of Mental Health grant.
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FOR MORE INFORMATION:
Health Behavior News Service: (202) 387-2829 or www.hbns.org.
Interviews: Contact Caroline P. Carney at ccarneyd@iupui.edu.
Psychosomatic Medicine: Contact Victoria White at (352) 376-1611, ext. 5300,
or psychosomatic@medicine.ufl.edu. Online, visit www.psychosomaticmedicine.org.
Center for the Advancement of Health
Contact: Ira R. Allen
Director of Public Affairs
202.387.2829
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