The hidden dangers of a cancer diagnosis
Menée en Suède à partir de données portant sur 720 901 patients atteints d'un cancer diagnostiqué entre 1991 et 2009, cette étude évalue le risque de blessures iatrogènes ou d'autre nature, juste avant et après le diagnostic (7 306 blessures liées à un acte médical, 8 331 blessures d'autres causes)
No one can deny that medical advances have prolonged life and improved the human condition. Yet it is equally true that outcomes of medical encounters are neither universally beneficial nor benign. As long ago as 19 BC, Virgil wrote that it is often the case that “the disease worsens with the treatment.”1 In the linked paper, Shen and colleagues (doi:10.1136/bmj.i4218)2 extend this assertion to “the disease worsens with the diagnosis.” They sought to determine how a diagnosis of cancer, apart from the disease and its treatment, heightens the risk of injury before and after the diagnostic period. They hypothesized that injury secondary to a diagnosis results from both medical complications and psychosocial stress.
Shen and colleagues analysed hospital discharge diagnoses related to injury in over 720 000 patients with cancer in Sweden and compared a diagnostic period (the 16 weeks before and after a diagnosis) with a control period the year before diagnosis.2 Consistent with previous research, they found that injuries among patients with cancer were common3 4 as well as potentially life threatening.4 5 The study found that in over 720 000 patients there were 15 000 injuries severe enough to result in admission to hospital during their diagnostic period.Given that they examined only those injuries that resulted in admission, the estimates of injury related to cancer diagnosis were conservative. Because data were derived from Sweden’s nationwide patient registry, the sampling was admirably large, remarkably representative, and minimally biased.
To characterize the types of injuries associated with a cancer diagnosis, Shen and colleagues sorted injuries into those that were “iatrogenic” and those that were not.2 Interestingly, Bleuler, a psychiatrist, invented the term “iatrogenic illness” to describe a patient’s psychological distress caused by a physician’s communication of a poor prognosis.6 Here, the term is used to refer to medically, not psychologically, induced injuries. To probe into the psychological distress caused by a physician’s communication of a diagnosis of cancer is beyond the scope and capacity of registry data. Such an investigation would require detailed questioning of patients and physicians about thoughts and feelings aroused by the diagnosis. Nevertheless, the study shows interesting patterns suggesting that clinicians and researchers should pay more attention to the negative influence of a diagnosis of cancer on the health and wellbeing of patients.
Shen and colleagues found that people with a diagnosis of cancer experienced significantly more iatrogenic injuries in the weeks before and after their diagnosis compared with the year before.2 That the process of diagnosis of cancer can result in injuries such as bleeding and infections is worth noting, even though it’s unsurprising. The knowledge that younger, better educated patients, those with a history of psychiatric illness, and those with certain cancers (such as central nervous system and colorectal cancers) are at an increased risk of injury can help to inform how the diagnostic period is managed in these more vulnerable groups. The variability in injuries by type of cancer suggests that iatrogenic harm resulting from diagnoses other than cancer might also show dramatic differences in injury by disease...
BMJ , éditorial en libre accès, 2015