Evening circadian preference as a potential risk factor for cancer-depression comorbidity: a comprehensive analysis from population cohort to molecular insights

Jun 5, 2026Journal of advanced research

Evening body clock preference may increase risk for having both cancer and depression: analysis from population data to molecular details

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Abstract

Evening chronotype is associated with a 30% to 55% increased risk of developing cancer-depression comorbidity.

  • Individuals with an evening chronotype have a higher risk of developing comorbidity from a healthy baseline for overall cancer, colorectal cancer, and breast cancer.
  • There is an increased risk of developing depression following a cancer diagnosis among those with an evening chronotype.
  • Subgroup analyses indicate that females, smokers, and individuals with lower income may be particularly vulnerable to this risk.
  • Genetic analyses reveal that individuals with both an evening chronotype and low morning chronotype genetic risk are at the highest risk for comorbidity.
  • Five circadian clock-related genes are consistently linked to both cancer and depression, suggesting shared biological pathways involving neuroendocrine and metabolic processes.

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