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Depressed Women Less Likely to Get Best Breast Cancer Care: Study [Consumer.Healthday.com]

 

Breast cancer patients with a history of depression are less likely to receive recommended care for their disease, a new study finds.

The study included more than 45,000 Danish women diagnosed with early stage breast cancer between 1998 and 2011. Of those, 13 percent had been treated with antidepressants and 2 percent had previously visited a hospital for depression.

Compared with those who never took antidepressants, patients who used antidepressants were much less likely to receive recommended breast cancer treatments and had shorter overall survival, according to Dr. Nis Suppli, of the Danish Cancer Society Research Center in Copenhagen, Denmark, and colleagues.

In addition, the researchers found that antidepressant use was tied to shorter breast cancer-specific survival: five years after cancer diagnosis, 13 percent of patients who used antidepressants had died of breast cancer, compared to 11 percent of those who never took the drugs.



[For more of this story go to https://consumer.healthday.com...re-study-716774.html]

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