33
Chronology of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in Older Cancer Patients International Workshop on Palliative Care to the Geriatric Oncology Patient Muscat, Sultanate of Oman, February 10-13, 2013 James C. Coyne, Ph.D. Department of Psychiatry, University of Pennsylvania Health Psychology Program, University of

Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Embed Size (px)

DESCRIPTION

Evidence-based, but practical..and comes out against routine screening for distress unless system in place to offer treatment

Citation preview

Page 1: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Chronology of Distress, Anxiety, and Depression in

Older Cancer Patients

International Workshop on Palliative Care to the Geriatric Oncology Patient

Muscat, Sultanate of Oman,

February 10-13, 2013

James C. Coyne, Ph.D.Department of Psychiatry, University of PennsylvaniaHealth Psychology Program, University of Groningen

Page 2: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Do older cancer patients experience fewer psychological symptoms- anxiety and depression?

Previously answered “of course,” but becoming controversial idea.

Page 3: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Major depression 15%

Anxiety disorders 10%

Dysthymia 3%

Page 4: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13
Page 5: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

• Cancer is less disruptive of social roles such as parenting and employment

• Greater acceptance of mortality, inevitability of end-of-life

• Diagnosis and experience of cancer interpreted in the context of larger physical co-morbidities

Page 6: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Different themes for older cancer patients:

•Patients’ perception of effects on family members: family burden

•Lost opportunity to witness family transitions

•Widowhood and social isolation (important predictors of non-remission of clinical depression)

Page 7: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

In general, major depression in the context of a general medical condition has longer episodes and a greater likelihood of relapse and recurrence.

In the case of cancer, attention to depression is often sacrificed to the competing priority of dealing with the cancer, despite the reduction in morbidity that would be achieved by effective treatment of depression.

Page 8: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Depression among cancer patients is associated with: 

•Negative impact on patient’s quality of life

•Reduced acceptance of and compliance with treatment plans

•Prolonged hospitalizations

•Reduced effective coping

•Desire for early death or suicide

Page 9: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Trajectory of adaptation to a diagnosis of cancer and its

treatment

Page 10: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Normal response to diagnosis of cancer is upset, sadness, fright, and worry about the future.

It is difficult to immediately establish whether response is abnormal and when formal psychiatric diagnosis and treatment are appropriate.

Page 11: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Much of initial response to cancer diagnosis is self-limiting or responsive to attention and support and better information.

By six months, residual distress tends to have existed before diagnosis, be tied to non-cancer factors, or reflect neuroticism or psychiatric comorbidity.

Page 12: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Different Patterns of Adjustment

30

35

40

45

50

55

60

65

Diagnosis 3 Months 6 Months

Cut Point

Never Disressed

Resolved Distress

Chronic Distress

Never Distressed 52% of sample; No Elevations over time

Resolved Distress 36% of sample; Elevated distress at diagnosis that resolves by 3 months

Chronic Distress 12% of sample; Elevated distress at all times

Page 13: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13
Page 14: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Deferred diagnosis of mild mental disorder, supportive action

(stepped diagnosis, stepped care)

Page 15: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

On the other hand, be alert to the early emergence of psychiatric disorder, particularly among patients with a past history

•Vegetative symptoms such as psychomotor retardation, extreme insomnia

•Pathological guilt and excessive self-blame

Page 16: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

It is controversial whether cancer is associated with psychiatric co-morbidity more than with other physical health conditions.

The challenge is making a diagnosis and ensuring adequate follow up within the competing demands of dealing with a life-threatening condition.

Page 17: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

In the case of cancer, attention to depression is often sacrificed to the competing priority of dealing with the cancer, despite the reduction in morbidity that would be achieved by effective treatment of depression.

In general, major depression in the context of a general medical condition has longer episodes and a greater likelihood of relapse and recurrence.

Page 18: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

• 25 studies

• Antidepressants more efficacious than placebo at 4-5, 6-8, and 9-18

• Superiority over placebo is apparent within 4-5 weeks and increases with continued use.

Page 19: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Detecting psychiatric morbidity: The argument against routine

screening of cancer patients for depression and anxiety

Page 20: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Effective care for depression requires accurate diagnosis and follow up.

Routine care for depression in general medical settings typically no better than receiving placebo in a clinical trial.

Estimated that 40% of general medical patients receiving treatment for depression achieve no benefit over remaining on waiting list.

Page 21: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Rather than routinely screening patients for depression and placing them in inadequate routine care without follow-up:

•Concentrate on ensuring better follow-up care for known cases of

depression

•Concentrate on patientsat high risk for depression

Page 22: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Be aware of the limitations of common self-report screening instruments:

•Cut points may not hold in another language and culture unless cross validated

•Do not reliably distinguish between anxiety and depression symptoms

•Do not translate well (ex.- butterflies in the stomach)

Page 23: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) should not be used

Coyne JC, van Sonderen E: The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) is dead, but like Elvis, there will still be citings. Journal of Psychosomatic Research. 73:77-78.

Page 24: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13
Page 25: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Importance of history psychiatric disorder

Page 26: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Psychiatric disorders tend to be recurrent and episodic, with onset the late teens or early 20s.

Most psychiatric disorders in cancer patients will be recurrences, so past history a good predictor.

Late onset depression is treatable, but less responsive than a recurrence.

Page 27: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

• Anhedonia

• Apathy

• Pain, fatigue masqueradingas depressive symptoms

Page 28: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Many depressed patients do not renew prescriptions.

About half require dosage adjustment, medication changes, or education about adherence at five weeks to achieve benefits.

Page 29: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Don't neglect needs of informal caregivers.

Initial symptomatology of women is higher than men, regardless of whether they are patients or spouses.

Page 30: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

A key issue in the management of depression among elderly cancer patients is not the availability of efficacious treatments, but ensuring their effective delivery and follow-up.

Page 31: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Collaborative care for depression:

• At least 79 evaluations, 4 with the elderly, 3 with cancer patients

• Interdisciplinary team approach

• Key element is a depression care manager, usually a nurse

• Effect sizes in the range of => .30-.40

Page 32: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Is there an app for this?

Challenge of collaborative care is sustainability, cost of care manager

App decision aids for providers

Cell phone support, remindersfor patients

Page 33: Chronology of distress, anxiety, and depression in older cancer aa 2 5 13

Thank you!

[email protected]

Follow me on Twitter@CoyneoftheRealm