People with cancer face many challenges, and some worry about the risk of suicidal thoughts or actions. A large review looked at 39 studies to understand these risks better. It also checked if psychosocial interventions could help reduce the severity of suicidal behavior. The findings offer important but limited information for doctors and care teams.
The analysis combined data from many different sources to see if certain factors increased the risk of suicidal behavior or death. The results showed a weak but statistically significant link for suicidal behavior. However, the link to suicidal death was not statistically significant. This means the data did not clearly show a connection for death.
The review also tested if psychosocial interventions helped. These are support methods that address emotional and social needs. The study found no significant changes in the degree of suicidal behavior between groups that received support and control groups. This suggests these interventions did not clearly reduce the severity of suicidal behavior in this specific analysis.
The evidence has limits. The review states that the current data limits evidence-informed clinical decision-making, service planning, and prioritization of future research in oncology and survivorship care. More work is needed to understand these risks and find effective ways to help people with cancer stay safe.