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OBJECTIVE: This study tested the predictive role of psychological distress in cancer survival, while attempting to overcome several important methodological and statistical limitations that have clouded the issue. METHODS: Measures collected on a range of emotional and cognitive factors in the early postdiagnostic period and at 4-month intervals up to 15 months after diagnosis were used to predict survival time up to 10 years among 205 cancer patients heterogeneous in disease site, status, and progression. RESULTS: With the use of both baseline and repeated measures, depressive symptomology was the most consistent psychological predictor of shortened survival time, after controlling for several known demographic and medical risk factors. CONCLUSIONS: Given the importance of depressive symptoms to cancer survival, discussion focuses on the possible mechanisms mediating this relationship, the importance of psychological screening of cancer patients, and need for further research.
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Brown et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a07ed6c686e45fdbcfe09ea — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1097/01.psy.0000077503.96903.a6
Kirk Warren Brown
Carnegie Mellon University
Adrian R. Levy
Dalhousie University
Zeev Rosberger
Jewish General Hospital
Psychosomatic Medicine
University of British Columbia
University of Rochester
Jewish General Hospital
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