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@ARTICLE{Doege:163926,
author = {D. Doege$^*$ and M. Thong$^*$ and L. Koch-Gallenkamp$^*$
and L. Jansen$^*$ and H. Bertram and A. Eberle and B.
Holleczek and R. Pritzkuleit and A. Waldmann and S. R.
Zeissig and H. Brenner$^*$ and V. Arndt$^*$},
title = {{A}ge-specific prevalence and determinants of depression in
long-term breast cancer survivors compared to female
population controls.},
journal = {Cancer medicine},
volume = {9},
number = {22},
issn = {2045-7634},
address = {Hoboken, NJ},
publisher = {Wiley},
reportid = {DKFZ-2020-02150},
pages = {8713-8721},
year = {2020},
note = {#EA:C071#LA:C071#2020 Nov;9(22):8713-8721},
abstract = {Depression is more prevalent in breast cancer (BC)
survivors than in the general population. However, little is
known about depression in long-term survivors. Study
objectives were: (1) to compare the age-specific prevalence
of depressive symptoms (a) in BC survivors vs female
population controls, (b) in disease-free BC survivors vs BC
survivors with self-reported recurrence vs controls, and (2)
to explore determinants of depression in BC survivors.About
3010 BC survivors (stage I-III, 5-16 years post-diagnosis),
and 1005 population controls were recruited in German
multi-regional population-based studies. Depression was
assessed by the Geriatric Depression Scale-15. Prevalence of
mild/severe and severe depression only were estimated via
logistic regression, controlling for age and education.
Multinomial logistic regression was used to explore
determinants of mild and severe depression.Compared with
population controls, BC survivors were more likely to report
mild/severe depression $(30.4\%$ vs $23.8\%,$ p = .0003),
adjusted for age and education. At all age groups
<80 years, prevalence of both mild/severe and severe
depression only was significantly higher in BC survivors,
while BC survivors ≥80 years reported severe depression
less frequently than controls. BC survivors with recurrence
reported significantly higher prevalence of mild/severe
depression than disease-free survivors and controls, but
prevalence in disease-free survivors and controls was
comparable. Age, income, living independently, recurrence,
and BMI were significant determinants of mild depression in
BC survivors. Age, education, employment, income,
recurrence, and BMI were significant determinants of severe
depression.Long-term BC survivors <80 years report
significantly higher prevalence of depressive symptoms than
controls, which might be explained by recurrence and
individual factors. The findings suggest that depression in
BC survivors is common, and even more after BC recurrence.
Clinicians should routinize screening and normalize referral
to psychological care.},
cin = {C071 / C070 / C120 / HD01},
ddc = {610},
cid = {I:(DE-He78)C071-20160331 / I:(DE-He78)C070-20160331 /
I:(DE-He78)C120-20160331 / I:(DE-He78)HD01-20160331},
pnm = {313 - Cancer risk factors and prevention (POF3-313)},
pid = {G:(DE-HGF)POF3-313},
typ = {PUB:(DE-HGF)16},
pubmed = {pmid:33022889},
doi = {10.1002/cam4.3476},
url = {https://inrepo02.dkfz.de/record/163926},
}