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Although behavioral mechanisms in the association among depression, anxiety, and cancer are plausible, few studies have empirically studied mediation by health behaviors. We aimed to examine the mediating role of several health behaviors in the associations among depression, anxiety, and the incidence of various cancer types (overall, breast, prostate, lung, colorectal, smoking-related, and alcohol-related cancers).
Methods
Two-stage individual participant data meta-analyses were performed based on 18 cohorts within the Psychosocial Factors and Cancer Incidence consortium that had a measure of depression or anxiety (N = 319 613, cancer incidence = 25 803). Health behaviors included smoking, physical inactivity, alcohol use, body mass index (BMI), sedentary behavior, and sleep duration and quality. In stage one, path-specific regression estimates were obtained in each cohort. In stage two, cohort-specific estimates were pooled using random-effects multivariate meta-analysis, and natural indirect effects (i.e. mediating effects) were calculated as hazard ratios (HRs).
Results
Smoking (HRs range 1.04–1.10) and physical inactivity (HRs range 1.01–1.02) significantly mediated the associations among depression, anxiety, and lung cancer. Smoking was also a mediator for smoking-related cancers (HRs range 1.03–1.06). There was mediation by health behaviors, especially smoking, physical inactivity, alcohol use, and a higher BMI, in the associations among depression, anxiety, and overall cancer or other types of cancer, but effects were small (HRs generally below 1.01).
Conclusions
Smoking constitutes a mediating pathway linking depression and anxiety to lung cancer and smoking-related cancers. Our findings underline the importance of smoking cessation interventions for persons with depression or anxiety.
Factors associated with depression are usually identified from cross-sectional studies.
Aims
We explore the relative roles of onset and recovery in determining these associations.
Method
Hazard ratios for onset and recovery were estimated for 39 risk factors from a cohort study of 10 045 general practice attendees whose depression status was assessed at baseline, 6 and 12 months.
Results
Risk factors have a stronger relative effect on the rate of onset than recovery. The strongest risk factors for both onset and maintenance of depression tend to be time-dependent. With the exception of female gender the strength of a risk factor's effect on onset is highly predictive of its impact on recovery.
Conclusions
Preventive measures will achieve a greater reduction in the prevalence of depression than measures designed to eliminate risk factors post onset. The strength of time-dependent risk factors suggests that it is more productive to focus on proximal rather than distal factors.
In elderly men as in elderly women, endogenous estradiol may play an important role in age-related cognitive impairment. To explore the relation between estradiol, cognition, dementia, and cerebral atrophy, Muller and Geerlings performed a systematic literature review. In their review, the authors found that most studies in elderly men do not report significant associations between estradiol levels and cognitive performance, cognitive decline, dementia, or brain atrophy. Some studies, however, do imply that higher estradiol levels are potentially detrimental, although to the extent that a relation may exist, the magnitude of risk is likely small. Given the long preclinical phase of Alzheimer's disease (AD), it is difficult to infer causality, even in longitudinal studies with long follow-up. Muller and Geerling indicated that the relation between estradiol and vascular risk merits further study with respect to AD. In addition, they provide evidence that sex hormone binding globulin (SHBG) levels and aromatase activity are relevant to questions of AD pathogenesis.
There is evidence that the prevalence of common mental disorders varies
across Europe.
Aims
To compare prevalence of common mental disorders in general practice
attendees in six European countries.
Method
Unselected attendees to general practices in the UK, Spain, Portugal,
Slovenia, Estonia and The Netherlands were assessed for major depression,
panic syndrome and other anxiety syndrome. Prevalence of DSM–IV major
depression, other anxiety syndrome and panic syndrome was compared
between the UK and other countries after taking account of differences in
demographic factors and practice consultation rates.
Results
Prevalence was estimated in 2344 men and 4865 women. The highest
prevalence for all disorders occurred in the UK and Spain, and lowest in
Slovenia and The Netherlands. Men aged 30–50 and women aged 18–30 had the
highest prevalence of major depression; men aged 40–60 had the highest
prevalence of anxiety, and men and women aged 40–50 had the highest
prevalence of panic syndrome. Demographic factors accounted for the
variance between the UK and Spain but otherwise had little impact on the
significance of observed country differences.
Conclusions
These results add to the evidence for real differences between European
countries in prevalence of psychological disorders and show that the
burden of care on general practitioners varies markedly between
countries.
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