Differences in clinical variables of cervical cancer in women with schizophrenia
F. Casanovas, F. Dinamarca, S. Oller, A. Trabsa, L. Martínez-Sadurní, R. Rodríguez-Seoane, N. Zabaleta, L. M. Martin, V. Perez-Sola, A. I. Ruiz

TL;DR
Women with schizophrenia are less likely to be diagnosed with cervical cancer through screening and more likely to die from it, suggesting a need for better access to early detection.
Contribution
This study identifies clinical differences in cervical cancer outcomes between women with and without schizophrenia.
Findings
Women with schizophrenia had a higher proportion of cervical cancer diagnoses (8% vs 4.4%) and fewer through screening programs (7.7% vs 14.6%).
Women with schizophrenia had a higher mortality rate (46.2% vs 15%) and more deaths outside hospital facilities (30.8% vs 6.6%).
Abstract
Schizophrenia is associated with a reduced life expectancy, not only because of suicide, but also medical causes such as cancer. Standardized mortality for cancer is higher in patients with schizophrenia, specially for lung, breast and colorectal locations (Ni et al, 2019). Other less frequent tumor locations have not been deeply studied. Thir mortality gap could be related to a delayed diagnosis due to several reasons, such as lower inclusion in screening programs (Solmi et al, 2019). Since cervical cancer has a very efficient screening technique, women with schizophrenia and cervical cancer could have a worse prognosis because of a delayed diagnosis. However, there is a lack of research in this tumor location. To analyze clinical differences in women with cervical cancer with and without a diagnosis of schizophrenia. We carried out a retrospective cohort analysis with adult…
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Taxonomy
TopicsEndometrial and Cervical Cancer Treatments
