Screening Instruments for Depression in Advanced
Abstract
BACKGROUND:
Patients in a palliative care
trajectory frequently suffer from depression.
To distinguish depression
from normal sadness, the use of screening instruments could facilitate
the diagnostic process. However, in palliative care, screening
instruments may not discern physical symptom burden from psychological
distress, due to the high number of physical symptoms in palliative
patients.
OBJECTIVES:
The aim of this study was to
explore physical symptom burden and psychological distress in patients
with advanced cancer in relation to scores on screening instruments for
depression.
METHODS:
Patients with advanced cancer were
asked to fill out the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI-II), Beck
Depression Inventory Primary Care (BDI-PC), Hospital Anxiety and
Depression Scale (HADS), and Memorial Symptom Assessment Scale Short
Form (MSAS-SF). The relationship between scores on screening tools for
depression and different physical symptom clusters was explored.
RESULTS:
In
the sample of 65 patients, screening instruments for depression
correlated highly with different somatic symptom clusters. The BDI-II
cognitive subscale was the only scale that was not significantly
correlated with any of the somatic symptom clusters.
CONCLUSION:
Screening
tools for the detection of depression in patients with advanced cancer
may not provide an accurate evaluation of depression. These tools seem
to measure physical symptom burden as well, especially when patients
suffer from symptoms of the clusters fatigue/anorexia/cachexia,
neuropsychology, debility, or pain. In this study, the BDI-II cognitive
subscale seems to differentiate best from somatic symptom burden.
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