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– Is the relationship between major depressive disorder and the development of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other medical conditions a coincidence, or is there more at play?

According to Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, a host of circumstances potentially underlies this association, including treatment of the medical disorder itself.

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff

“The best example of that is probably the use of interferon-alpha for the treatment of malignant melanoma,” Dr. Nemeroff, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin, said during an annual psychopharmacology update held by the Nevada Psychiatric Association. “Many patients treated with interferon-alpha ended up with very severe depression, including several documented suicides. Another possibility of the relationship between depression and medical disorders is that treating a patient for depression could result in a medical disorder. The best example of this is the use of 20 mg of olanzapine to augment the effects of an antidepressant, resulting in a 50-pound weight gain and the development of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Both of those scenarios are well understood.”

Then there’s the behavioral aspects of the relationship, he continued, in which patients adopt the mindset that “I’m depressed. I don’t want to exercise. I’m a couch potato. I have been gaining a lot of weight. It’s bad for my heart.”

Converging biology is another possibility. “Is it possible that the biology of depression is linked to the biology of other disorders?” asked Dr. Nemeroff, who directs the university’s Institute for Early Life Adversity Research. “We can talk about this in relation to thyroid disease, a well known cause of depression, but we can also talk about the relationship to other disorders. There’s amazing epidemiologic evidence that patients with PTSD are much more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease than patients without PTSD.”

Psychosocial issues also play a role. He recalled seeing patient in a clinic for the underserved who had underlying severe ulcerative colitis and anemia and couldn’t afford medical treatment. “The patient had a low hemoglobin, so it was impossible to distinguish between that and whether they had a primary depressive disorder or not,” he said.

In a study that explored the relationship between major depression and cancer, Dr. Nemeroff and colleagues found that the prevalence was highest in those with pancreatic cancer (50%), followed by oropharyngeal (40%), colon (13-25%), breast (18-25%), and gynecologic (23%), and Hodgkin’s lymphoma (17%) (Arch Gen Psychiatry 1995;52[2]:89-99). “Not all cancers have the same rate of depression,” he said. “One of the central questions is, not so much is the cancer patient depressed, but is depression a risk factor for developing cancer? The answer is a resounding yes. But what we don’t know is if you treat the depression aggressively, can you reduce that risk of either developing cancer or the progression of cancer?”

Dr. Nemeroff spotlighted several studies largely from the oncology literature, including a prospective survival analysis of 578 women with early-stage breast cancer (Lancet 1999;354:1331-6). After 5 years, 395 were alive and without relapse, 50 were alive with relapse, and 133 had died. The researchers found a significantly increased risk of death from all causes by 5 years in women with a high depression score (HR 3.59). There was a significantly increased risk of relapse or death at 5 years in women with high scores on helplessness and hopelessness measures.

In an analysis of the association between breast cancer and traumatic events, women who had severe stress or a traumatic event had lower rates of disease-free intervals (J Psychosomatic Res 2007;63:233-9). Another study by the same investigators found that a decrease in depression symptoms is associated with longer survival in patients with metastatic breast cancer (J Clin Oncol 2010;29:413-20). The median survival was 53.6 months for women with decreasing depression scores over 1 year and 25.1 months for women with increasing depression scores.



A more recent study of cervical cancer patients found that those exposed to psychological stress had an increased risk of cancer-specific mortality (HR 1.33) (Cancer Res 2019;79:3965-72). The association was mainly driven by distress experienced within 1 year before or after diagnosis (HR 1.30) but not afterward (HR 1.12). In addition, data from the large longitudinal Nurses’ Health Study II found that women with high PTSD symptoms had a twofold greater risk of ovarian cancer compared with women who had no trauma exposure (Cancer Res 2019;79:5113-20).

Authors of a separate study analyzed data from the Women’s Health Initiative to examine if depression precedes the development of a cancer diagnosis. They found that depression 3 years before a diagnosis of breast cancer was associated with all-cause mortality (HR 1.35) (Cancer 2017;123[16]:3107-15). Meanwhile, among women with late-stage breast cancer, newly developed depression at year 3 was significantly associated with all-cause mortality (HR 2.0) and breast cancer-specific mortality (HR 2.42). “That’s a pretty amazing finding,” Dr. Nemeroff said. “We have to think about depression as a systemic illness. What is depression doing that’s creating a fertile environment for cancer or worsening of cancer?”

He then discussed the risk of suicide in patients who are newly diagnosed with cancer. “No one ever talks about this, and I can’t get anybody to support research in this area,” he said. In one of the first studies on the topic, researchers conducted a case-control study of Medicare patients and determined risk of suicide among those with cancer was 2.3-fold higher compared with controls, even after adjustment for psychiatric illness and the risk of dying within a year (J Clin Oncol 2008;26[29]:4720-4). More recently, authors of a large population-based study in England found that the overall standardized mortality ratio for suicide was 1.20 (JAMA Psychiatry 2019;76[1]51-60). The risk was highest among patients with mesothelioma, with a 4.51-fold risk, followed by pancreatic (3.89-fold), esophageal (2.65-fold), lung (2.57-fold), and stomach cancer (2.20-fold). “They reported that the first 6 months after the diagnosis is associated with an increased risk of suicide – unrelated to prognosis,” Dr. Nemeroff said.

A separate analysis of SEER data from 1973-2014 and comprising more than 8.6 million cancer patients found that newly diagnosed cancer patients are 4.4 times more likely to die from suicide than patients in the same age group without cancer (Nat Commun 2019;10[1]:207). The highest risk was in lung cancer, followed by head and neck, testes, bladder, and Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

According to Dr. Nemeroff, the association between depression and the risk of certain forms of cancer or with a poor cancer prognosis “may have to do with immune function. Depression is associated with a change in inflammatory markers that very likely control the microenvironment of the tumor.” For example, he said, if the depressed environment is associated with a marked increase in tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 6, and other inflammatory markers, “that probably contributes to the body’s ability to fight disease. Ironically, depression is associated with an increase in inflammation but a decreased in T cell function. Remember, there are two fundamental types of immunity: the antibody response and the cellular response. What’s odd about depression is that there’s an increase in inflammatory markers but a decrease in the ability of T cells to function in terms of cellular immunity.”

Dr. Nemeroff disclosed that he has served as a consultant and/or scientific adviser for numerous pharmaceutical companies. He has received research and grant support from the National Institutes of Health.

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– Is the relationship between major depressive disorder and the development of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other medical conditions a coincidence, or is there more at play?

According to Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, a host of circumstances potentially underlies this association, including treatment of the medical disorder itself.

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff

“The best example of that is probably the use of interferon-alpha for the treatment of malignant melanoma,” Dr. Nemeroff, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin, said during an annual psychopharmacology update held by the Nevada Psychiatric Association. “Many patients treated with interferon-alpha ended up with very severe depression, including several documented suicides. Another possibility of the relationship between depression and medical disorders is that treating a patient for depression could result in a medical disorder. The best example of this is the use of 20 mg of olanzapine to augment the effects of an antidepressant, resulting in a 50-pound weight gain and the development of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Both of those scenarios are well understood.”

Then there’s the behavioral aspects of the relationship, he continued, in which patients adopt the mindset that “I’m depressed. I don’t want to exercise. I’m a couch potato. I have been gaining a lot of weight. It’s bad for my heart.”

Converging biology is another possibility. “Is it possible that the biology of depression is linked to the biology of other disorders?” asked Dr. Nemeroff, who directs the university’s Institute for Early Life Adversity Research. “We can talk about this in relation to thyroid disease, a well known cause of depression, but we can also talk about the relationship to other disorders. There’s amazing epidemiologic evidence that patients with PTSD are much more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease than patients without PTSD.”

Psychosocial issues also play a role. He recalled seeing patient in a clinic for the underserved who had underlying severe ulcerative colitis and anemia and couldn’t afford medical treatment. “The patient had a low hemoglobin, so it was impossible to distinguish between that and whether they had a primary depressive disorder or not,” he said.

In a study that explored the relationship between major depression and cancer, Dr. Nemeroff and colleagues found that the prevalence was highest in those with pancreatic cancer (50%), followed by oropharyngeal (40%), colon (13-25%), breast (18-25%), and gynecologic (23%), and Hodgkin’s lymphoma (17%) (Arch Gen Psychiatry 1995;52[2]:89-99). “Not all cancers have the same rate of depression,” he said. “One of the central questions is, not so much is the cancer patient depressed, but is depression a risk factor for developing cancer? The answer is a resounding yes. But what we don’t know is if you treat the depression aggressively, can you reduce that risk of either developing cancer or the progression of cancer?”

Dr. Nemeroff spotlighted several studies largely from the oncology literature, including a prospective survival analysis of 578 women with early-stage breast cancer (Lancet 1999;354:1331-6). After 5 years, 395 were alive and without relapse, 50 were alive with relapse, and 133 had died. The researchers found a significantly increased risk of death from all causes by 5 years in women with a high depression score (HR 3.59). There was a significantly increased risk of relapse or death at 5 years in women with high scores on helplessness and hopelessness measures.

In an analysis of the association between breast cancer and traumatic events, women who had severe stress or a traumatic event had lower rates of disease-free intervals (J Psychosomatic Res 2007;63:233-9). Another study by the same investigators found that a decrease in depression symptoms is associated with longer survival in patients with metastatic breast cancer (J Clin Oncol 2010;29:413-20). The median survival was 53.6 months for women with decreasing depression scores over 1 year and 25.1 months for women with increasing depression scores.



A more recent study of cervical cancer patients found that those exposed to psychological stress had an increased risk of cancer-specific mortality (HR 1.33) (Cancer Res 2019;79:3965-72). The association was mainly driven by distress experienced within 1 year before or after diagnosis (HR 1.30) but not afterward (HR 1.12). In addition, data from the large longitudinal Nurses’ Health Study II found that women with high PTSD symptoms had a twofold greater risk of ovarian cancer compared with women who had no trauma exposure (Cancer Res 2019;79:5113-20).

Authors of a separate study analyzed data from the Women’s Health Initiative to examine if depression precedes the development of a cancer diagnosis. They found that depression 3 years before a diagnosis of breast cancer was associated with all-cause mortality (HR 1.35) (Cancer 2017;123[16]:3107-15). Meanwhile, among women with late-stage breast cancer, newly developed depression at year 3 was significantly associated with all-cause mortality (HR 2.0) and breast cancer-specific mortality (HR 2.42). “That’s a pretty amazing finding,” Dr. Nemeroff said. “We have to think about depression as a systemic illness. What is depression doing that’s creating a fertile environment for cancer or worsening of cancer?”

He then discussed the risk of suicide in patients who are newly diagnosed with cancer. “No one ever talks about this, and I can’t get anybody to support research in this area,” he said. In one of the first studies on the topic, researchers conducted a case-control study of Medicare patients and determined risk of suicide among those with cancer was 2.3-fold higher compared with controls, even after adjustment for psychiatric illness and the risk of dying within a year (J Clin Oncol 2008;26[29]:4720-4). More recently, authors of a large population-based study in England found that the overall standardized mortality ratio for suicide was 1.20 (JAMA Psychiatry 2019;76[1]51-60). The risk was highest among patients with mesothelioma, with a 4.51-fold risk, followed by pancreatic (3.89-fold), esophageal (2.65-fold), lung (2.57-fold), and stomach cancer (2.20-fold). “They reported that the first 6 months after the diagnosis is associated with an increased risk of suicide – unrelated to prognosis,” Dr. Nemeroff said.

A separate analysis of SEER data from 1973-2014 and comprising more than 8.6 million cancer patients found that newly diagnosed cancer patients are 4.4 times more likely to die from suicide than patients in the same age group without cancer (Nat Commun 2019;10[1]:207). The highest risk was in lung cancer, followed by head and neck, testes, bladder, and Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

According to Dr. Nemeroff, the association between depression and the risk of certain forms of cancer or with a poor cancer prognosis “may have to do with immune function. Depression is associated with a change in inflammatory markers that very likely control the microenvironment of the tumor.” For example, he said, if the depressed environment is associated with a marked increase in tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 6, and other inflammatory markers, “that probably contributes to the body’s ability to fight disease. Ironically, depression is associated with an increase in inflammation but a decreased in T cell function. Remember, there are two fundamental types of immunity: the antibody response and the cellular response. What’s odd about depression is that there’s an increase in inflammatory markers but a decrease in the ability of T cells to function in terms of cellular immunity.”

Dr. Nemeroff disclosed that he has served as a consultant and/or scientific adviser for numerous pharmaceutical companies. He has received research and grant support from the National Institutes of Health.

– Is the relationship between major depressive disorder and the development of cancer, cardiovascular disease, and other medical conditions a coincidence, or is there more at play?

According to Charles B. Nemeroff, MD, PhD, a host of circumstances potentially underlies this association, including treatment of the medical disorder itself.

Courtesy University of Texas, Austin
Dr. Charles B. Nemeroff

“The best example of that is probably the use of interferon-alpha for the treatment of malignant melanoma,” Dr. Nemeroff, professor and chair of the department of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the University of Texas at Austin, said during an annual psychopharmacology update held by the Nevada Psychiatric Association. “Many patients treated with interferon-alpha ended up with very severe depression, including several documented suicides. Another possibility of the relationship between depression and medical disorders is that treating a patient for depression could result in a medical disorder. The best example of this is the use of 20 mg of olanzapine to augment the effects of an antidepressant, resulting in a 50-pound weight gain and the development of type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome. Both of those scenarios are well understood.”

Then there’s the behavioral aspects of the relationship, he continued, in which patients adopt the mindset that “I’m depressed. I don’t want to exercise. I’m a couch potato. I have been gaining a lot of weight. It’s bad for my heart.”

Converging biology is another possibility. “Is it possible that the biology of depression is linked to the biology of other disorders?” asked Dr. Nemeroff, who directs the university’s Institute for Early Life Adversity Research. “We can talk about this in relation to thyroid disease, a well known cause of depression, but we can also talk about the relationship to other disorders. There’s amazing epidemiologic evidence that patients with PTSD are much more likely to develop Alzheimer’s disease than patients without PTSD.”

Psychosocial issues also play a role. He recalled seeing patient in a clinic for the underserved who had underlying severe ulcerative colitis and anemia and couldn’t afford medical treatment. “The patient had a low hemoglobin, so it was impossible to distinguish between that and whether they had a primary depressive disorder or not,” he said.

In a study that explored the relationship between major depression and cancer, Dr. Nemeroff and colleagues found that the prevalence was highest in those with pancreatic cancer (50%), followed by oropharyngeal (40%), colon (13-25%), breast (18-25%), and gynecologic (23%), and Hodgkin’s lymphoma (17%) (Arch Gen Psychiatry 1995;52[2]:89-99). “Not all cancers have the same rate of depression,” he said. “One of the central questions is, not so much is the cancer patient depressed, but is depression a risk factor for developing cancer? The answer is a resounding yes. But what we don’t know is if you treat the depression aggressively, can you reduce that risk of either developing cancer or the progression of cancer?”

Dr. Nemeroff spotlighted several studies largely from the oncology literature, including a prospective survival analysis of 578 women with early-stage breast cancer (Lancet 1999;354:1331-6). After 5 years, 395 were alive and without relapse, 50 were alive with relapse, and 133 had died. The researchers found a significantly increased risk of death from all causes by 5 years in women with a high depression score (HR 3.59). There was a significantly increased risk of relapse or death at 5 years in women with high scores on helplessness and hopelessness measures.

In an analysis of the association between breast cancer and traumatic events, women who had severe stress or a traumatic event had lower rates of disease-free intervals (J Psychosomatic Res 2007;63:233-9). Another study by the same investigators found that a decrease in depression symptoms is associated with longer survival in patients with metastatic breast cancer (J Clin Oncol 2010;29:413-20). The median survival was 53.6 months for women with decreasing depression scores over 1 year and 25.1 months for women with increasing depression scores.



A more recent study of cervical cancer patients found that those exposed to psychological stress had an increased risk of cancer-specific mortality (HR 1.33) (Cancer Res 2019;79:3965-72). The association was mainly driven by distress experienced within 1 year before or after diagnosis (HR 1.30) but not afterward (HR 1.12). In addition, data from the large longitudinal Nurses’ Health Study II found that women with high PTSD symptoms had a twofold greater risk of ovarian cancer compared with women who had no trauma exposure (Cancer Res 2019;79:5113-20).

Authors of a separate study analyzed data from the Women’s Health Initiative to examine if depression precedes the development of a cancer diagnosis. They found that depression 3 years before a diagnosis of breast cancer was associated with all-cause mortality (HR 1.35) (Cancer 2017;123[16]:3107-15). Meanwhile, among women with late-stage breast cancer, newly developed depression at year 3 was significantly associated with all-cause mortality (HR 2.0) and breast cancer-specific mortality (HR 2.42). “That’s a pretty amazing finding,” Dr. Nemeroff said. “We have to think about depression as a systemic illness. What is depression doing that’s creating a fertile environment for cancer or worsening of cancer?”

He then discussed the risk of suicide in patients who are newly diagnosed with cancer. “No one ever talks about this, and I can’t get anybody to support research in this area,” he said. In one of the first studies on the topic, researchers conducted a case-control study of Medicare patients and determined risk of suicide among those with cancer was 2.3-fold higher compared with controls, even after adjustment for psychiatric illness and the risk of dying within a year (J Clin Oncol 2008;26[29]:4720-4). More recently, authors of a large population-based study in England found that the overall standardized mortality ratio for suicide was 1.20 (JAMA Psychiatry 2019;76[1]51-60). The risk was highest among patients with mesothelioma, with a 4.51-fold risk, followed by pancreatic (3.89-fold), esophageal (2.65-fold), lung (2.57-fold), and stomach cancer (2.20-fold). “They reported that the first 6 months after the diagnosis is associated with an increased risk of suicide – unrelated to prognosis,” Dr. Nemeroff said.

A separate analysis of SEER data from 1973-2014 and comprising more than 8.6 million cancer patients found that newly diagnosed cancer patients are 4.4 times more likely to die from suicide than patients in the same age group without cancer (Nat Commun 2019;10[1]:207). The highest risk was in lung cancer, followed by head and neck, testes, bladder, and Hodgkin’s lymphoma.

According to Dr. Nemeroff, the association between depression and the risk of certain forms of cancer or with a poor cancer prognosis “may have to do with immune function. Depression is associated with a change in inflammatory markers that very likely control the microenvironment of the tumor.” For example, he said, if the depressed environment is associated with a marked increase in tumor necrosis factor, interleukin 6, and other inflammatory markers, “that probably contributes to the body’s ability to fight disease. Ironically, depression is associated with an increase in inflammation but a decreased in T cell function. Remember, there are two fundamental types of immunity: the antibody response and the cellular response. What’s odd about depression is that there’s an increase in inflammatory markers but a decrease in the ability of T cells to function in terms of cellular immunity.”

Dr. Nemeroff disclosed that he has served as a consultant and/or scientific adviser for numerous pharmaceutical companies. He has received research and grant support from the National Institutes of Health.

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