Everson-Rose Susan A, Meyer Peter M, Powell Lynda H, Pandey Dilip, Torréns Javier I, Kravitz Howard M, Bromberger Joyce T, Matthews Karen A
Department of Preventive Medicine, Rush University Medical Center, 1700 W. Van Buren St., Suite 470, Chicago, IL 60612, USA.
Diabetes Care. 2004 Dec;27(12):2856-62. doi: 10.2337/diacare.27.12.2856.
To examine depression and 3-year change in insulin resistance and risk of diabetes and whether associations vary by race.
We analyzed data from 2,662 Caucasian, African-American, Hispanic, Japanese-American, and Chinese-American women without a history of diabetes from the Study of Women's Health Across the Nation. We estimated regression coefficients and odds ratios to determine whether depression (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale score > or =16) predicted increases in homeostasis model assessment of insulin resistance (HOMA-IR) and greater risk of incident diabetes, respectively, over 3 years.
Mean baseline HOMA-IR was 1.31 (SD 0.86) and increased 0.05 units per year for all women (P <0.0001). A total of 97 incident cases of diabetes occurred. Depression was associated with absolute levels of HOMA-IR (P <0.04) but was unrelated to changes in HOMA-IR; associations did not vary by race. The association between depression and HOMA-IR was eliminated after adjustment for central adiposity (P=0.85). Depression predicted a 1.66-fold greater risk of diabetes (P <0.03), which became nonsignificant after adjustment for central adiposity (P=0.12). We also observed a depression-by-race interaction (P <0.05) in analyses limited to Caucasians and African Americans, the only groups with enough diabetes cases to reliably test this interaction. Race-stratified models showed that depression predicted 2.56-fold greater risk of diabetes in African Americans only, after risk factor adjustment (P=0.008).
Depression is associated with higher HOMA-IR values and incident diabetes in middle-aged women. These associations are mediated largely through central adiposity. However, African-American women with depression experience increased risk of diabetes independent of central adiposity and other risk factors.
研究抑郁症与胰岛素抵抗的3年变化及糖尿病风险之间的关系,以及这些关联是否因种族而异。
我们分析了来自全国女性健康研究中2662名无糖尿病病史的白人、非裔美国人、西班牙裔、日裔美国人和华裔美国女性的数据。我们估计了回归系数和比值比,以确定抑郁症(流行病学研究中心抑郁量表评分≥16)是否分别预测了3年内胰岛素抵抗稳态模型评估(HOMA-IR)的增加和新发糖尿病风险的增加。
所有女性的平均基线HOMA-IR为1.31(标准差0.86),每年增加0.05个单位(P<0.0001)。共发生97例糖尿病新发病例。抑郁症与HOMA-IR的绝对水平相关(P<0.04),但与HOMA-IR的变化无关;这些关联不因种族而异。在调整中心性肥胖后,抑郁症与HOMA-IR之间的关联消失(P=0.85)。抑郁症预测糖尿病风险增加1.66倍(P<0.03),在调整中心性肥胖后变得不显著(P=0.12)。在仅限于白人和非裔美国人的分析中,我们还观察到抑郁症与种族之间的相互作用(P<0.05),这是仅有的有足够糖尿病病例可靠检验这种相互作用的两个群体。种族分层模型显示,在调整风险因素后,抑郁症仅预测非裔美国人患糖尿病的风险增加2.56倍(P=0.008)。
抑郁症与中年女性较高的HOMA-IR值和新发糖尿病有关。这些关联主要通过中心性肥胖介导。然而,患有抑郁症的非裔美国女性患糖尿病的风险增加,独立于中心性肥胖和其他风险因素。