Kaptein Kirsten I, de Jonge Peter, van den Brink Rob H S, Korf Jakob
Department of Psychiatry, University Medical Center Groningen, University of Groningen, The Netherlands.
Psychosom Med. 2006 Sep-Oct;68(5):662-8. doi: 10.1097/01.psy.0000233237.79085.57. Epub 2006 Sep 20.
The presence of depressive symptoms after myocardial infarction (MI) is a risk factor for new cardiovascular events. The importance of the course of post-MI depressive symptoms for cardiac prognosis is not clear. We therefore set out to investigate whether different courses of post-MI depressive symptoms can be identified and determine their associations with cardiac events.
Data were derived from the Depression after Myocardial Infarction (DepreMI) study, a naturalistic follow-up study of patients admitted for an MI in four hospitals in The Netherlands (N = 475). Scores on the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) during hospitalization and at 3, 6, and 12 months post-MI were analyzed. Using latent class analysis (LCA), we identified classes characterized by distinctive courses of depressive symptoms and then examined their link to cardiac prognosis.
The prevalence of significant depressive symptoms ranged from 22.7% to 25.5% throughout the post-MI year. Five distinct courses were found: no depressive symptoms (56.4%), mild depressive symptoms (25.7%), moderate and increasing depressive symptoms (9.3%), significant but decreasing depressive symptoms (4.6%), and significant and increasing depressive symptoms (4.0%). Subjects in this last class had, statistically, a significantly higher risk for a new cardiovascular event compared with subjects without depressive symptoms (hazard ratio (HR) = 2.73; p = .01). Controlling for baseline cardiac status and sociodemographic data did not alter the association (HR = 2.46; p = .03).
Post-MI depressed subjects with significant and increasing depressive symptoms are at particular risk of new cardiac events. This subgroup may be most suited for evaluation of the effects of antidepressant treatment on cardiac prognosis.
心肌梗死(MI)后出现抑郁症状是新发心血管事件的一个危险因素。MI后抑郁症状的病程对心脏预后的重要性尚不清楚。因此,我们着手研究是否可以识别MI后抑郁症状的不同病程,并确定它们与心脏事件的关联。
数据来自心肌梗死后抑郁(DepreMI)研究,这是一项对荷兰四家医院收治的MI患者进行的自然随访研究(N = 475)。分析了住院期间以及MI后3个月、6个月和12个月时的贝克抑郁量表(BDI)得分。使用潜在类别分析(LCA),我们识别出以抑郁症状独特病程为特征的类别,然后检查它们与心脏预后的联系。
在MI后的一整年中,显著抑郁症状的患病率在22.7%至25.5%之间。发现了五种不同的病程:无抑郁症状(56.4%)、轻度抑郁症状(25.7%)、中度且抑郁症状加重(9.3%)、显著但抑郁症状减轻(4.6%)以及显著且抑郁症状加重(4.0%)。与无抑郁症状的受试者相比,最后一组受试者发生新发心血管事件的风险在统计学上显著更高(风险比(HR)= 2.73;p = 0.01)。控制基线心脏状况和社会人口统计学数据并未改变这种关联(HR = 2.46;p = 0.03)。
MI后抑郁症状显著且加重的受试者发生新发心脏事件的风险尤其高。这个亚组可能最适合评估抗抑郁治疗对心脏预后的影响。