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			 The study team examined data from 60 previously published studies of 
			women who had survived breast cancer that focused on a variety of 
			psychological issues as well as challenges with cognitive and sexual 
			function one year or more after treatment. 
 "We already knew that women experience substantial psychological 
			distress around the breast cancer diagnosis and during the main 
			treatment period," said lead study author Helena Carreira of the 
			London School of Hygiene & Tropical Medicine in the UK.
 
 "There is a need for greater awareness that anxiety, depression and 
			cognitive and sexual dysfunctions are common after breast cancer, 
			and that treatments are available," Carreira said by email. "Early 
			detection and treatment of any mental health issues that arise is 
			likely to help women better cope with the disease and its 
			aftermath."
 
			
			 
			
 Newer screening, diagnosis and treatment options have transformed 
			breast cancer from a fatal illness into a chronic illness for many 
			women, leaving survivors to contend with a wide range of physical 
			and mental health issues that may result from the tumors or from 
			treatments to destroy the tumors.
 
 Depending on the type of breast cancer and treatment women had, they 
			may have an increased risk of blood clots, strokes, bone weakness, 
			fractures, breathing difficulties and sexual health problems, 
			previous research has found.
 
 Distress, depression and anxiety may also be ongoing problems for 
			breast cancer survivors, particularly if they were younger when they 
			were diagnosed or had a history of mental illness prior to the 
			cancer diagnosis, some prior studies also suggest.
 
 The current analysis, published in the Journal of the National 
			Cancer Institute, takes a closer look at the potential for a broad 
			range of mental health issues to surface after women get through 
			breast cancer treatment.
 
 For example, breast cancer survivors had up to twice the odds of 
			developing anxiety as women who never had cancer in some of the 
			smaller studies that examined this question.
 
 Up to one in five breast cancer survivors had anxiety in studies 
			that looked for this diagnosis in electronic health records, while 
			as many as half of them had anxiety in studies that assessed anxiety 
			by giving women questionnaires about anxiety symptoms, the current 
			analysis found.
 
			
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			Breast cancer survivors also had up to twice the risk of depression. 
			One in 10 breast survivors had depression based on medical records 
			looking for this diagnosis, while the figure climbed to 30 percent 
			in studies that questioned women about their symptoms.
 From 20 percent to 40 percent of breast cancer survivors experienced 
			neurocognitive impairments like challenges with memory, the analysis 
			also found.
 
 Breast cancer survivors were also up to two times more likely to 
			experience sexual dysfunction than women who had not been diagnosed 
			with tumors.
 
 One limitation of the analysis is that researchers didn't pool data 
			across the smaller studies to assess the potential for mental 
			cognitive, or sexual issues after a breast cancer diagnosis. The 
			smaller studies in the analysis also used a wide variety of methods 
			to measure outcomes like depression.
 
 The included studies also focused mostly on older women, and younger 
			breast cancer survivors tend to have higher rates of anxiety and 
			depression than their older counterparts, said Dr. Fremonta Meyer of 
			the Dana-Farber Cancer Center in Boston.
 
 Breast cancer survivors may also find that their increased risk of 
			mental health problems is most pronounced in the first years after 
			their diagnosis, Meyer, who wasn't involved in the analysis, said by 
			email.
 
			
			 
			
 "Several studies have shown that long term cancer survivors - more 
			than five years from diagnosis - largely resemble the general 
			population in terms of rates of mental health diagnoses," Meyer 
			added. "Therefore, breast cancer survivors should definitely remain 
			hopeful that emotional symptoms will improve with more distance from 
			their diagnosis."
 
 SOURCE: https://bit.ly/2E8vVtW Journal of the National Cancer 
			Institute, published online November 7, 2018.
 
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