Barth Jürgen, Schumacher Martina, Herrmann-Lingen Christoph
Department of Rehabilitation Psychology, Institute of Psychology, University of Freiburg, Germany.
Psychosom Med. 2004 Nov-Dec;66(6):802-13. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000146332.53619.b2.
Prospective studies on physically healthy subjects have shown an association between depression and the subsequent development of coronary heart disease (CHD). The relative risk in meta-analytic aggregation is 1.64 (confidence interval [CI], 1.29-2.08) for any CHD event. However, the adverse impact of depression on CHD patients has not yet been the subject of a meta-analysis.
To quantify the impact of depressive symptoms (eg, BDI, HADS) or depressive disorders (major depression) on cardiac or all-cause mortality. We analyzed the strength of the relationship, the time dependency, and the differences in studies using depressive symptoms or a clinical diagnosis as predictors of mortality.
English and German language databases (Medline, PsycInfo, PSYNDEX) from 1980 to 2003 were searched for prospective cohort studies. Sixty-two publications were identified. The inclusion criteria were met by 29 publications reporting on 20 studies. A random model was used to estimate the combined overall effect as crude odds ratios (OR) or adjusted hazard ratios (HR [adj]).
Depressive symptoms increase the risk of mortality in CHD patients. The risk of depressed patients dying in the 2 years after the initial assessment is two times higher than that of nondepressed patients (OR, 2.24; 1.37-3.60). This negative prognostic effect also remains in the long-term (OR, 1.78; 1.12-2.83) and after adjustment for other risk factors (HR [adj], 1.76; 1.27-2.43). The unfavorable impact of depressive disorders was reported for the most part in the form of crude odds ratios. Within the first 6 months, depressive disorders were found to have no significant effect on mortality (OR, 2.07; CI, 0.82-5.26). However, after 2 years, the risk is more than two times higher for CHD patients with clinical depression (OR, 2.61; 1.53-4.47). Only three studies reported adjusted hazard ratios for clinical depression and supported the results of the bivariate models.
Depressive symptoms and clinical depression have an unfavorable impact on mortality in CHD patients. The results are limited by heterogeneity of the results in the primary studies. There is no clear evidence whether self-report or clinical interview is the more precise predictor. Nevertheless, depression has to be considered a relevant risk factor in patients with CHD.
针对身体健康受试者的前瞻性研究表明,抑郁症与随后冠心病(CHD)的发生之间存在关联。对于任何冠心病事件,荟萃分析汇总得出的相对风险为1.64(置信区间[CI],1.29 - 2.08)。然而,抑郁症对冠心病患者的不良影响尚未成为荟萃分析的主题。
量化抑郁症状(如贝克抑郁量表[BDI]、医院焦虑抑郁量表[HADS])或抑郁症(重度抑郁症)对心脏或全因死亡率的影响。我们分析了这种关系的强度、时间依赖性,以及使用抑郁症状或临床诊断作为死亡率预测指标的研究之间的差异。
检索1980年至2003年的英文和德文数据库(医学索引数据库[Medline]、心理学文摘数据库[PsycInfo]、德国心理学文献数据库[PSYNDEX]),查找前瞻性队列研究。共识别出62篇出版物。29篇报告20项研究的出版物符合纳入标准。采用随机模型估计合并总体效应,以粗比值比(OR)或调整后的风险比(HR[adj])表示。
抑郁症状会增加冠心病患者的死亡风险。在初次评估后的2年内,抑郁患者死亡的风险是非抑郁患者的两倍(OR,2.24;1.37 - 3.60)。这种负面的预后影响在长期也依然存在(OR,1.78;1.12 - 2.83),并且在对其他风险因素进行调整后(HR[adj],1.76;1.27 - 2.43)。抑郁症的不利影响大多以粗比值比的形式报告。在最初的6个月内,抑郁症被发现对死亡率没有显著影响(OR,2.07;CI,0.82 - 5.26)。然而,2年后,临床抑郁症的冠心病患者风险高出两倍多(OR,2.61;1.53 - 4.47)。只有三项研究报告了临床抑郁症的调整后风险比,并支持双变量模型的结果。
抑郁症状和临床抑郁症对冠心病患者的死亡率有不利影响。这些结果受限于原始研究结果的异质性。没有明确证据表明自我报告或临床访谈哪个是更精确的预测指标。尽管如此,抑郁症必须被视为冠心病患者的一个相关风险因素。