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Depression among Endometrial Cancer hospitalizations - Preliminary results of a nationwide retrospective study

Authors :
P. Vieito
A.R. Ferreira
M. Gonçalves-Pinho
F. Costa
M. Coelho
A. Freitas
L. Fernandes
Source :
European Psychiatry, Vol 65, Pp S215-S215 (2022)
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Cambridge University Press, 2022.

Abstract

Introduction Uterine cancer is the most common gynecologic malignant neoplasm in developed countries. While depression is up to 3-5 times more common in patients with cancer than in the general population, literature is still limited regarding the relation between Endometrial Cancer and depression. Objectives To analyze Depression among Endometrial Cancer hospitalizations in mainland Portuguese public hospitals (2008-2015). Methods A retrospective observational study was conducted using administrative data from all hospitalizations in Portuguese mainland public hospitals between 2008-2015. All women’s hospitalizations(≥18 years) with a primary diagnosis of Endometrial Cancer (ICD-9-CM 182.x) were selected. Secondary diagnosis of depression was identified with ICD-9-CM 296.2x, 296.3x and 311x codes. Surgical procedures codes 68.4x, 65.6x, 40.3x, 40.5x, 68.6x, 68.9x and 68.8x were used to divide the hospitalizations into surgical vs non-surgical. Groups were compared with Pearson Chi-square test and crude odds ratio(OR) was used to estimate the association between surgery and depression. Results From 10227 hospitalizations with a primary diagnosis of Endometrial Cancer, 533 had a registry of depression(5.2%). Annual depression frequency rose from 2.0% (2008) to 8.3% (2015). Among patients with a record of depression, 73.2% had surgery. Women who had surgery were significantly more likely to have registered depression (p

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
09249338 and 17783585
Volume :
65
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
European Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.0e3fd4d2732c478192de6f4b63d2c030
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1192/j.eurpsy.2022.560