4.7 Article

Loneliness and mental health during the COVID-19 pandemic in older breast cancer survivors and noncancer controls

Journal

CANCER
Volume 127, Issue 19, Pages 3671-3679

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/cncr.33687

Keywords

anxiety; breast cancer; cancer survivorship; coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19); depression; loneliness; older adults; psychological stress

Categories

Funding

  1. National Cancer Institute of the National Institutes of Health [R01CA129769, R35CA197289, R01AG068193]
  2. National Institutes of Health [K01AG065485, P30AG028716, K01CA212056, K08CA241337, K12HD001441, R01CA172119, U54CA137788, P30CA008748, R01CA244673, P30AG010133]
  3. American Cancer Society [17-023-01-CPPB, 128660-RSG-15-187-01-PCS]
  4. University of California-Los Angeles Cousins Center for Psychoneuroimmunology at the University of California, Los Angeles

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During the COVID-19 pandemic, both cancer survivors and women without cancer reported changes in loneliness and mental health. However, both groups experienced increased loneliness from before to during the pandemic, which was associated with worsening mental health. Screening for loneliness during medical care interactions will be important for identifying older women at risk for adverse mental health effects of the pandemic.
Background The coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) pandemic has had wide-ranging health effects and increased isolation. Older with cancer patients might be especially vulnerable to loneliness and poor mental health during the pandemic. Methods The authors included active participants enrolled in the longitudinal Thinking and Living With Cancer study of nonmetastatic breast cancer survivors aged 60 to 89 years (n = 262) and matched controls (n = 165) from 5 US regions. Participants completed questionnaires at parent study enrollment and then annually, including a web-based or telephone COVID-19 survey, between May 27 and September 11, 2020. Mixed-effects models were used to examine changes in loneliness (a single item on the Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression [CES-D] scale) from before to during the pandemic in survivors versus controls and to test survivor-control differences in the associations between changes in loneliness and changes in mental health, including depression (CES-D, excluding the loneliness item), anxiety (the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory), and perceived stress (the Perceived Stress Scale). Models were adjusted for age, race, county COVID-19 death rates, and time between assessments. Results Loneliness increased from before to during the pandemic (0.211; P = .001), with no survivor-control differences. Increased loneliness was associated with worsening depression (3.958; P < .001) and anxiety (3.242; P < .001) symptoms and higher stress (1.172; P < .001) during the pandemic, also with no survivor-control differences. Conclusions Cancer survivors reported changes in loneliness and mental health similar to those reported by women without cancer. However, both groups reported increased loneliness from before to during the pandemic that was related to worsening mental health, suggesting that screening for loneliness during medical care interactions will be important for identifying all older women at risk for adverse mental health effects of the pandemic.

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