Back to Search Start Over

Mental health screening and diagnosis in cancer patients: Impact on mortality and suggestion of racial bias

Authors :
John Z. Benton
Phillip Woodruff
Zachary Klaassen
Stephen B. Williams
Cristiane Decat Bergerot
Christopher J.D. Wallis
Source :
Cancer
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Wiley, 2021.

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Disparity in mental health care among cancer patients remains understudied. METHODS: We conducted a large, retrospective, single tertiary-care institution cohort study based on de-identified electronic health record data of 54,852 adult cancer patients without prior mental health diagnosis (MHD) diagnosed at the University of California, San Francisco between 1/2012 and 9/2019. The exposure of interest was early onset MHD with or without psychotropic medication (PM) within 12 months of cancer diagnosis and primary outcome was all-cause mortality. RESULTS: 8.2% of patients received a new MHD at a median of 197 days (interquartile-range [IQR] 61-553) after incident cancer diagnosis, 31.0% received a PM prescription, and 3.7% a MHRV. 62.6% of patients were non-Hispanic white (NHW), 10.8% Asian, 9.8% Hispanic, and 3.8% Black. Compared to NHWs, minority cancer patients had reduced adjusted odds of MHDs, PM prescriptions, and MHRVs, particularly for generalized anxiety (Asian: odds ratio [OR] 0.66, 95% confidence interval 0.55-0.78; Black: OR 0.60, 0.45-0.79; Hispanic: OR 0.72, 0.61-0.85) and selective-serotonin-reuptake-inhibitors (SSRI; Asian: OR 0.43, 0.37-0.50; Black: OR 0.51, 0.40-0.61; Hispanic: OR 0.79, 0.70-0.89). New early MHD with PM was associated with elevated all-cause mortality (12-24 months: hazard ratio [HR] 1.43, 1.25-1.64) that waned by 24-36 months (HR 1.18, 0.95-1.45). CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: New mental health diagnosis with psychotropic medication was a marker of early mortality among cancer patients. Minority cancer patients were less likely to receive documentation of mental health diagnoses or treatment, which may represent missed opportunities to identify and treat cancer related mental health conditions.

Details

ISSN :
10970142 and 0008543X
Volume :
128
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Cancer
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....6b7f3047e0e347a8855de6310d767a67
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.33901