Gibbie T, Mijch A, Ellen S, Hoy J, Hutchison C, Wright E, Chua P, Judd F
Victorian HIV Service, The Alfred Hospital, Victoria, Australia.
HIV Med. 2006 Mar;7(2):112-21. doi: 10.1111/j.1468-1293.2006.00350.x.
The aims of this study were to follow a cohort of HIV-infected individuals for 2 years to assess changes in depression and neuropsychological performance over time, to explore the relationship between depression, HIV illness and neuropsychological performance, and to examine the natural history of the effect of highly active antiretroviral therapy (HAART) on depression and neurocognitive performance.
HIV-seropositive out-patients were assessed at baseline and at 2-year follow-up. At each assessment, patients were assessed for depression [using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) and Structured Clinical Interview (SCID-CV)] and completed a battery of neuropsychological tests including the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery (CANTAB) and the Hopkins HIV Dementia Scale (HDS).
At baseline, 34.8% scored > or =14 on the BDI [> or =14 suggests depressive symptoms (DS)]. The SCID-CV revealed that 27% of participants met the criteria for current mood disorder. Seven per cent of the participants' scores on the HDS indicated HIV-associated cognitive changes. Eighty participants were re-tested at 2-year follow-up and were split into two groups based on BDI scores at baseline. CANTAB results revealed that the cohort were significantly impaired on nine of 10 measures compared with age-matched normative data. Neurocognitive performance significantly improved for participants with no DS at baseline, whereas participants with DS at baseline did not show as much improvement. Multivariate analysis revealed that 40% of the change in cognitive performance was attributable to the variables age, AIDS and HAART regimen.
These results suggest a significant decline in depression scores and an improvement in several neurocognitive domains over time, with a relationship between HIV illness, HAART, symptoms of depression and neurocognitive performance.
本研究旨在对一组HIV感染者进行为期2年的随访,以评估抑郁及神经心理表现随时间的变化,探讨抑郁、HIV疾病与神经心理表现之间的关系,并研究高效抗逆转录病毒治疗(HAART)对抑郁和神经认知表现影响的自然病程。
对HIV血清学阳性的门诊患者在基线和2年随访时进行评估。每次评估时,使用贝克抑郁量表(BDI)和结构化临床访谈(SCID-CV)对患者进行抑郁评估,并完成一系列神经心理测试,包括剑桥神经心理测试自动成套测验(CANTAB)和霍普金斯HIV痴呆量表(HDS)。
在基线时,34.8%的患者BDI得分≥14分(≥14分提示有抑郁症状)。SCID-CV显示27%的参与者符合当前心境障碍的标准。7%的参与者HDS得分表明存在与HIV相关的认知改变。80名参与者在2年随访时再次接受测试,并根据基线时的BDI得分分为两组。CANTAB结果显示,与年龄匹配的正常数据相比,该队列在10项测量中有9项显著受损。基线时无抑郁症状的参与者神经认知表现显著改善,而基线时有抑郁症状的参与者改善不明显。多变量分析显示,认知表现变化的40%可归因于年龄、艾滋病和HAART治疗方案等变量。
这些结果表明,随着时间的推移,抑郁评分显著下降,几个神经认知领域有所改善,HIV疾病、HAART、抑郁症状与神经认知表现之间存在关联。