Abstract
BACKGROUND Depression is common during and after breast cancer treatment. However, the role of specific therapeutic modalities and related biologic mechanisms remains unclear. Radiation is an essential component of breast-conserving therapy and may contribute to depression in patients with breast cancer through the activation of inflammatory pathways. METHODS Depressive symptoms and inflammatory mediators, including nuclear factor kappa B (NF-κB), were assessed at baseline (before radiation), during radiation, and 6 weeks after radiation in 64 women who had stage 0 through IIIA breast cancer. RESULTS No significant increases in depressive symptoms occurred during or after radiation, although a number of patients exhibited moderate-to-severe depression throughout the study. Multivariate analyses of baseline factors predictive of depression revealed that educational status, perceived stress, prior chemotherapy, and peripheral blood NF-κB DNA binding all were independent predictors of persistent depressive symptoms after radiation (all P
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Torres, M. A., Pace, T. W., Liu, T., Felger, J. C., Mister, D., Doho, G. H., … Miller, A. H. (2013). Predictors of depression in breast cancer patients treated with radiation: Role of prior chemotherapy and nuclear factor kappa B. Cancer, 119(11), 1951–1959. https://doi.org/10.1002/cncr.28003
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