Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of psychiatric diagnoses among a sample of breast reconstruction patients and measure the association between these diagnoses and reconstruction-related,… Click to show full abstract
Objective: The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of psychiatric diagnoses among a sample of breast reconstruction patients and measure the association between these diagnoses and reconstruction-related, patient-reported outcomes. Background: The impact of psychiatric disorders in conjunction with breast cancer diagnosis, treatment, and reconstruction have the potential to cause significant patient distress but remains not well understood. Methods: A retrospective review of postmastectomy breast reconstruction patients from 2007 to 2018 at Memorial Sloan Kettering Cancer Center was conducted. Patient demographics, comorbidities, cancer characteristics, psychiatric diagnoses, and BREAST-Q Reconstruction Module scores (measuring satisfaction with breast, well-being of the chest, psychosocial, and sexual well-being) at postoperative years 1 to 3 were examined. Mixed-effects models and cross-sectional linear regressions were conducted to measure the effect of psychiatric diagnostic class type and number on scores. Results: Of 7414 total patients, 50.1% had at least 1 psychiatric diagnosis. Patients with any psychiatric diagnoses before reconstruction had significantly lower BREAST-Q scores for all domains at all time points. Anxiety (50%) and depression (27.6%) disorders were the most prevalent and had the greatest impact on BREAST-Q scores. Patients with a greater number of psychiatric diagnostic classes had significantly worse patient-reported outcomes compared with patients with no psychiatric diagnosis. Psychosocial (β: −7.29; 95% confidence interval: −8.67, −5.91), and sexual well-being (β: −7.99; 95% confidence interval: −9.57, −6.40) were most sensitive to the impact of psychiatric diagnoses. Conclusions: Mental health status is associated with psychosocial and sexual well-being after breast reconstruction surgery as measured with the BREAST-Q. Future research will need to determine what interventions (eg, screening, early referral) can help improve outcomes for breast cancer patients with psychiatric disorders undergoing breast reconstruction.
               
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