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Veteran Testicular Cancer Survivors Face High Mental Health Burden

Anxiety, depression, and suicidality are more common over 5 years vs controls

Anxiety, depression, and suicide rates are elevated for veterans who are survivors of testicular cancer (TC) compared with veterans without cancer, a retrospective analysis finds.

Over 5 years, the cumulative incidence of anxiety and depression was 53.4% in veterans with TC vs 35.0% in matched controls (P < .001; hazard ratio [HR], 1.66), reported Aditya Bagrodia, MD, professor of urology and radiation oncology at the University of California San Diego, et al in Cancer Medicine. The cumulative incidence of suicidality was 5.0% and 0.1%, respectively (P < .001; HR, 22.99).

“More than half of men with testicular cancer contend with these diagnoses,” Bagrodia told Federal Practitioner. “There are risk factors, including chemotherapy, being single or divorced, or unemployed.”

Patients in these groups warrant aggressive screening and intervention, Bagrodia said. TC is the most common cancer in men in the military and the most common malignancy in men aged 18 to 45 years, Bagrodia said: “The vast majority of men who have testicular cancer are curable.”

Patients, however, face an intense burden. 

“One theme that comes up consistently from patients and caregivers is centered around mental health impact, brain fog, anxiety, depression, and difficulty concentrating,” Bagrodia said. “We wanted to dig into this a little bit further. The idea is to shed light on how common these diagnoses are on these young cancer survivors and intervene so we could positively impact their quality of life.”

The study analyzed 2022 patients with TC and 6375 matched controls enrolled at the US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) from 1990 through 2016. In the cancer cohort, the mean age at diagnosis was 42.46 years, and ages ranged from 18 to 88 years; 89.7% of patients were White, 6.0% were Black, 2.4% were other race, 1.2% were Asian/Pacific Islander, and 0.7% were Native; 6.2% were Hispanic; and 19.9% were diagnosed between 1990 and 1999.

Factors linked to higher rates of anxiety/depression among patients with TC included divorce (HR 1.15, = .044), unemployment (HR 1.68, P < .001), and receipt of chemotherapy (HR 1.20, P < .001).

The incidence of de novo anxiety/depression was 30.1% for patients with TC vs 16.7% for controls (P < .001), and the incidence of de novo suicidality was 2.4% for patients and 0.1% for controls.

“These are men who are going to beat their cancer and go on to live for decades and decades,” Bagrodia said. “We found that the impact of a diagnosis and chemotherapy can persist beyond the initial time frame.”

It’s not clear, however, why chemotherapy boosts the risk, Bagrodia said. Clinicians who treat patients with TC should let them know that anxiety, depression, and suicidality are common and treatable concerns.

“We've got some wonderful support services, therapy, and medications that can help out with those diagnoses,” Bagrodia said.

The study authors noted limitations such as the retrospective study design and limited consideration of factors that may affect mental health.

“Additionally, the baseline rates of anxiety, depression, and suicidality are high in the VA population, which may limit ability to apply results to the civilian population,” Bagrodia said.

Genitourinary oncologist Philippe Spiess, MD, of Moffitt Cancer Center in Tampa, praised the study in an interview, saying it provides stronger evidence than previous research. 

"It's not only about screening but surveillance, because you never know what kind of challenges they have in their lives,” Spiess told Federal Practitioner, emphasizing the need for clinicians to continue to monitor patients. “They're young, they're vulnerable. Don’t assume they're going to get help somewhere else. You need to be that source that facilitates it.”

No funding is reported. Bagrodia and other authors have no disclosures. Spiess has no disclosures.