Depression, anxiety, and the risk of cancer: An individual participant data meta-analysis

Publication date

2023-10-15

Authors

van Tuijl, Lonneke A
Basten, Maartje
Pan, Kuan-Yu
Vermeulen, RoelORCID 0000-0003-4082-8163
Portengen, Lützen
De Graeff, AlexanderISNI 0000000392189877
Dekker, Joost
Geerlings, M.ORCID 0000-0002-4037-036XISNI 0000000391005079
Hoogendoorn, Adriaan
Lamers, Femke

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

Collections

Open Access logo

License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Depression and anxiety have long been hypothesized to be related to an increased cancer risk. Despite the great amount of research that has been conducted, findings are inconclusive. To provide a stronger basis for addressing the associations between depression, anxiety, and the incidence of various cancer types (overall, breast, lung, prostate, colorectal, alcohol-related, and smoking-related cancers), individual participant data (IPD) meta-analyses were performed within the Psychosocial Factors and Cancer Incidence (PSY-CA) consortium. METHODS: The PSY-CA consortium includes data from 18 cohorts with measures of depression or anxiety (up to N = 319,613; cancer incidences, 25,803; person-years of follow-up, 3,254,714). Both symptoms and a diagnosis of depression and anxiety were examined as predictors of future cancer risk. Two-stage IPD meta-analyses were run, first by using Cox regression models in each cohort (stage 1), and then by aggregating the results in random-effects meta-analyses (stage 2). RESULTS: No associations were found between depression or anxiety and overall, breast, prostate, colorectal, and alcohol-related cancers. Depression and anxiety (symptoms and diagnoses) were associated with the incidence of lung cancer and smoking-related cancers (hazard ratios [HRs], 1.06-1.60). However, these associations were substantially attenuated when additionally adjusting for known risk factors including smoking, alcohol use, and body mass index (HRs, 1.04-1.23). CONCLUSIONS: Depression and anxiety are not related to increased risk for most cancer outcomes, except for lung and smoking-related cancers. This study shows that key covariates are likely to explain the relationship between depression, anxiety, and lung and smoking-related cancers. PREREGISTRATION NUMBER: https://www.crd.york.ac.uk/prospero/display_record.php?RecordID=157677.

Keywords

anxiety, cancer, depression, meta-analysis, risk, Oncology, Cancer Research, Journal Article

Citation

van Tuijl, L A, Basten, M, Pan, K-Y, Vermeulen, R, Portengen, L, de Graeff, A, Dekker, J, Geerlings, M I, Hoogendoorn, A, Lamers, F, Voogd, A C, Abell, J, Awadalla, P, Beekman, A T F, Bjerkeset, O, Boyd, A, Cui, Y, Frank, P, Galenkamp, H, Garssen, B, Hellingman, S, Huisman, M, Huss, A, de Jong, T R, Keats, M R, Kok, A A L, Krokstad, S, van Leeuwen, F E, Luik, A I, Noisel, N, Onland-Moret, N C, Payette, Y, Penninx, B W J H, Rissanen, I, Roest, A M, Ruiter, R, Schoevers, R A, Soave, D, Spaan, M, Steptoe, A, Stronks, K, Sund, E R, Sweeney, E, Twait, E, Teyhan, A, Verschuren, MW, van der Willik, K D, Rosmalen, J G M & Ranchor, A V 2023, 'Depression, anxiety, and the risk of cancer : An individual participant data meta-analysis', Cancer, vol. 129, no. 20, pp. 3287-3299. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.34853