
Psychiatr News October 20, 2006
Volume 41, Number 20, page 21
© 2006 American Psychiatric Association
Psychiatric Sequelae May Persist For Childhood Cancer Survivors
Aaron Levin
Once they reach adulthood, some survivors of childhood cancers report more
suicidal thoughts, but they can be helped with care directed toward their
special needs.
A minority of adults who survived cancer as children report having suicidal
feelings, although less than half of them were depressed, a new study found.
The increase in suicidality was largely associated with physical health
problems and shows the need for a multidisciplinary approach to care for these
patients, concluded the paper in the August 20 Journal of Clinical
Oncology.
"The association with physical health and pain is important because
these represent potentially treatable conditions for which survivors may seek
follow-up care," wrote Christopher Recklitis, Ph.D., M.P.H., director of
the Office of Research of the Perini Family Survivors' Center at the
Dana-Farber Cancer Institute in Boston, and colleagues.
"Our research gives empirical underpinnings to our clinical
experience," said Recklitis in an interview with Psychiatric
News. "This is a group that is struggling."
Suicidal thinking in this population may arise from a mix of preexisting
conditions, struggles with the aftereffects of illness and treatment, and
current physical functioning, he said.
"When kids get sick, it dislodges them from their typical life
coursesthis was not supposed to happen," he said.
"Families and communities help them get back to normal, but later
symptoms make them feel like being dislodged from life again. They've been hit
twice, 'sucker-punched by life.' "
Study participants included a convenience sample from the Perini center of
110 men and 126 women who had survived childhood cancer, ranging in age from
18 to 64. Their average age at diagnosis was 10 years, and an average of 18
years had passed since they learned they had cancer. Twenty-nine (12.8
percent) of the 226 participants reported suicide attempts, current suicidal
ideation, or both.
Depression was not always associated with suicidality, the researchers
said. Only 11 of the 209 suicidal respondents had Beck Depression Inventory
scores of 16 or above, the threshold for clinically significant
depression.
"Screening for depression alone may not be adequate," said
Recklitis and colleagues.
Younger age at cancer diagnosis, longer time since diagnosis, and cranial
radiation treatment were significantly associated with suicidality, they
found.
The researchers have raised an important issue for clinicians, but it
should be placed in perspective, Jimmie Holland, M.D., the Wayne Chapman Chair
in Psychiatric Oncology at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center in New York,
told Psychiatric News.
For one thing, she said, people with cancer typically go through periods of
hopelessness and may tell themselves: "Well, if things get really bad, I
can always kill myself," without intending to carry out the thought.
While such moments may be transitory, they might well be recalled when
answering a screening question.
The effects of radiation treatment are more complex, she said. Because
leukemia can spread to the brain, cranial radiation was formerly used as a
preventive measure. However, radiation to the head and neck can lead to
thyroid or pituitary problems that affect growth and sexual development. A
child who received radiation treatment may fail to enter or complete puberty.
Menarche may be advanced or delayed in some girls, depending on the site
irradiated.
Furthermore, cranial radiation caused cognitive deficits that lowered IQ
scores and reduced patients' self-esteem, said Holland. Cranial radiation was
replaced with systemic treatments in the 1970s, except for rare, high-risk
cases in which lower doses are now given.
Now that they are adults, survivors require special attention when it comes
to managing their care, Recklitis said.
Pediatric oncologists aren't expert in dealing with adult patients, he
said, and internists may not be knowledgeable about pediatric cancer
treatments.
Adult survivors of childhood cancers are not very common, so primary care
physicians see very few and are not familiar with their needs, said Recklitis.
Some may fail to order routine screening tests for these patients, assuming
that another physician has done so. Sometimes the patient must become the
conduit of information between his or her doctors.
"Someone needs a comprehensive view of the person," Recklitis
stated.
"There is a need to organize the whole medical system to handle the
problems of cancer survivors," Holland stressed. Survivors' clinics are
more common now, but cancer survivors of all ages need an annual evaluation of
their psychological, social, and physical status.
An abstract of "Suicidal Ideation and Attempts in Adult
Survivors of Childhood Cancer" is posted at
<www.jco.org/cgi/content/abstract/24/24/3852>.
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