Using emulated clinical trials to investigate the risk of being diagnosed with psychiatric ill health following the cancer diagnosis of a sibling
Sara Kjellsson, Kristiina Rajaleid, Bitte Modin

TL;DR
This study finds that a sibling's cancer diagnosis increases the risk of psychiatric issues in the other sibling, especially for men and unmarried individuals.
Contribution
The study introduces emulated clinical trials to examine the spillover effect of cancer diagnoses on siblings' mental health.
Findings
Exposed siblings had a 15% higher risk of psychiatric diagnosis than unexposed siblings.
Unmarried individuals faced a significantly higher risk when their sibling had cancer.
Women with a cancer-stricken sister had a higher risk of adverse psychiatric outcomes than those with a cancer-stricken brother.
Abstract
The sibling bond is often the longest relationship in an individual’s life, spanning both good and bad times. Focusing on the latter, we investigated whether a cancer diagnosis in one adult sibling is predictive of psychiatric illness in the other, and if any such effect differs according the ‘sociodemographic closeness’ between the siblings in terms of sex, age, education, marital status and residence. We used hospital records to identify psychiatric diagnoses (2005–2019) in a Swedish total-population cohort born in 1953, and cancer diagnoses (2005–2017) in their full siblings. By means of emulated clinical trials, the cohort member’s risk of a diagnosis within two years following a first exposure (or non-exposure) to a sibling’s cancer was analyzed through Cox regression. Exposed cohort members had a higher risk of psychiatric diagnosis than unexposed (HR = 1.15; CI: 1.08–1.23),…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFamily Support in Illness · Family Caregiving in Mental Illness · Intergenerational Family Dynamics and Caregiving
