Clin Med Res. 2026 Mar;24(1):9-19. doi: 10.3121/cmr.2025.1990.
ABSTRACT
Purpose: We explored the association between metastatic cancer, chemotherapy, and the risk for suicide attempts (suicide injuries) in adult trauma patients.Methods: We conducted a retrospective analysis of the Trauma Quality Program Participant Use File (2017-2019), comprising 27,474 patients from 700 U.S. Trauma Centers. Self-harm/suicide injury (compared to controls) was the dependent variable; presence of metastatic cancer and current chemotherapy were the key independent variables. We adjusted for age, sex, race/ethnicity, method of payment, facility levels, and discharge year (Model 1), and Model 1 plus trauma type, injury location, stay length, comorbidities, Injury Severity Score, and Glasgow Coma Scale (Model 2). We employed chi-square analysis, Fisher’s exact test, and unadjusted and adjusted logistic regression using Stata v18, setting statistical significance at P≤0.05.Results: Of 27,474 patients, 249 (0.91%) reported suicide injuries. Significantly higher attempts were noted among patients with metastatic cancer (201 out of 249; 80.72%) and those not receiving chemotherapy (184 out of 249; 73.90%), P<0.001. Metastatic cancer was associated with higher odds of suicide injuries (unadjusted OR:2.252, 95%CI: 1.642-3.089; adjusted OR in Model 1:1.925, 95%CI:1.302-2.848). Chemotherapy was associated with lower odds of suicide injuries (unadjusted OR:0.408, 95%CI:0.307-0.541; adjusted OR in Model 1:0.444, 95%CI:0.311-0.636). However, neither metastatic cancer nor chemotherapy was significantly associated with suicide injuries in adjusted Model 2, suggesting the crucial role of other factors in influencing this risk.Conclusion: Patients with metastatic cancer exhibited notable prevalence of suicide injuries. Findings suggested metastatic cancer was associated with higher odds, and chemotherapy with lower odds, of suicide injuries. Multifaceted factors were associated with suicide risk beyond the presence of metastatic cancer or chemotherapy status, underscoring the importance of mental health assessments and interventions in oncology care, particularly for those with advanced cancer.
PMID:41951430 | DOI:10.3121/cmr.2025.1990
AI Search
Share Evidence Blueprint

Search Google Scholar
Save as PDF

