von Ammon Cavanaugh S, Furlanetto L M, Creech S D, Powell L H
Department of Psychiatry and Preventive Medicine, Rush-Presbyterian-St.Luke's Medical Center, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Am J Psychiatry. 2001 Jan;158(1):43-8. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.158.1.43.
The authors' objectives were to determine 1) whether major depressive disorder diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria modified for the medically ill predicted in-hospital mortality better than major depressive disorder diagnosed according to inclusive DSM-IV criteria and 2) whether a history of depression and current depression predicted mortality independent of severity of physical illness.
Of 392 consecutive medical inpatients, 241 were interviewed within the first 3 days of admission and 151 were excluded from the study. Chart review and a clinical interview that included the Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia were used to determine demographic variables, past psychiatric history, psychiatric diagnoses, and illness measures. Diagnoses included major depressive disorder and minor depression diagnosed according to DSM-IV criteria that included all symptoms regardless of etiology and according to criteria modified for the medically ill (hopelessness, depression, or anhedonia were used as the qualifying affective symptoms; depressive symptoms were eliminated if easily explained by medical illness, treatments, or hospitalization). The Charlson combined age-comorbidity index was used to measure severity of illness.
A diagnosis of major depressive disorder based on criteria modified for patients with medical illness better predicted mortality than a diagnosis based on inclusive criteria. A past history of depression and the Charlson combined age-comorbidity index predicted in-hospital mortality, but demographic variables, pain, discomfort, length of stay, medical diagnoses, and minor depression did not. In the final multivariate logistic regression model, the Charlson combined age-comorbidity index, a modified diagnosis of major depressive disorder, and a history of depression were independent predictors of in-hospital death.
Severity of medical illness, a diagnosis of major depressive disorder based on modified criteria, and a past history of depression independently predicted in-hospital mortality in medical inpatients.
作者的目的是确定:1)根据针对内科疾病患者修改后的《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)标准诊断的重度抑郁症,相比根据包容性DSM-IV标准诊断的重度抑郁症,是否能更好地预测住院死亡率;2)抑郁症病史和当前的抑郁症,是否能独立于身体疾病的严重程度来预测死亡率。
在392名连续入院的内科患者中,241名在入院后的头3天内接受了访谈,151名被排除在研究之外。通过病历审查和包括情感障碍与精神分裂症检查表在内的临床访谈,来确定人口统计学变量、既往精神病史、精神疾病诊断以及疾病指标。诊断包括根据DSM-IV标准诊断的重度抑郁症和轻度抑郁症,该标准涵盖了所有症状,无论病因如何,以及根据针对内科疾病患者修改后的标准(绝望、抑郁或快感缺失被用作限定性情感症状;如果抑郁症状能轻易由内科疾病、治疗或住院解释,则予以排除)。采用查尔森年龄合并症指数来衡量疾病的严重程度。
基于针对内科疾病患者修改后的标准诊断的重度抑郁症,相比基于包容性标准的诊断,能更好地预测死亡率。抑郁症病史和查尔森年龄合并症指数可预测住院死亡率,但人口统计学变量、疼痛、不适、住院时长、内科诊断以及轻度抑郁症则不能。在最终的多变量逻辑回归模型中,查尔森年龄合并症指数、基于修改标准的重度抑郁症诊断以及抑郁症病史是住院死亡的独立预测因素。
内科疾病的严重程度、基于修改标准的重度抑郁症诊断以及抑郁症病史可独立预测内科住院患者的住院死亡率。