Concetti Chiave
Elevated depression symptoms are associated with increased risk of severe chemotherapy toxicity in older adults with cancer, but this risk can be mitigated by geriatric assessment-driven interventions.
Sintesi
The study was a secondary analysis of a randomized controlled trial that evaluated the impact of geriatric assessment (GA)-driven interventions on reducing grade 3 chemotherapy-related toxicities in older adults with cancer.
Key findings:
- Patients with elevated depression symptoms had increased chemotherapy toxicity in the standard-of-care arm (70.7% vs 54.3%; P = .02), but not in the GA-driven intervention arm (54.3% vs 48.5%; P = .27).
- The association between depression and chemotherapy toxicity remained significant after adjusting for other factors.
- No significant association was found between anxiety and chemotherapy toxicity in either the standard-of-care or GA-driven intervention arms.
- Depression was associated with increased odds of hematologic-only toxicities in the standard-of-care arm.
- A small subgroup analysis found associations between elevated anxiety symptoms and increased risk for hematologic and nonhematologic chemotherapy toxicities.
- The authors concluded that addressing elevated depression symptoms may lower the risk of chemotherapy toxicities in older cancer patients.
Statistiche
Patients with depression had increased chemotherapy toxicity in the standard-of-care arm (70.7% vs 54.3%; P = .02).
The association between depression and chemotherapy toxicity remained significant after adjusting for the Cancer and Aging Research Group toxicity score (odds ratio, [OR], 1.98; 95% CI, 1.07-3.65) and for demographic, disease, and treatment factors (OR, 2.00; 95% CI, 1.03-3.85).
Depression was associated with increased odds of hematologic-only toxicities (OR, 2.50; 95% CI, 1.13-5.56) in the standard-of-care arm.
Citazioni
"The current study showed that elevated depression symptoms are associated with increased risk of severe chemotherapy toxicities in older adults with cancer. This risk was mitigated in those in the GA intervention arm, which suggests that addressing elevated depression symptoms may lower the risk of toxicities."
"Overall, elevated anxiety symptoms were not associated with risk for severe chemotherapy toxicity."