Graham Kathryn, Massak Agnes, Demers Andrée, Rehm Jürgen
Social Factors and Prevention Interventions Section, Centre for Addiction and Mental Health, University of Western Ontario, 100 Collip Circle, London, Ontario, Canada.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007 Jan;31(1):78-88. doi: 10.1111/j.1530-0277.2006.00274.x.
Inconsistent findings regarding the relationship between alcohol consumption and depression, including whether the relationship is J-shaped or U-shaped, may be at least partly due to the types of measures used for both alcohol consumption and depression.
We conducted a general population survey using random digit dialing (RDD) and computer-assisted telephone interviewing (CATI) with 6,009 males and 8,054 females aged 18 to 76 years. The survey included 4 types of alcohol measures (frequency, usual and maximum quantity per occasion, volume, and heavy episodic drinking) covering both the past week and the past year, and 2 types of depression measures (meeting DSM criteria for a clinical diagnosis of major depression, recent depressed affect).
The overall relationship between depression and alcohol consumption did not vary by gender or type of depression measure but did vary significantly by type of alcohol measure, with the strongest relationship found for heavy episodic drinking and high quantity per occasion. There were also significant gender interactions with both depression and alcohol measures, with females showing a stronger relationship than males when depression was measured as meeting the criteria for major depression and when alcohol consumption was measured as quantity per occasion or heavy episodic drinking. There was some evidence of a J-shaped relationship, that is, greater depression among abstainers compared with those who usually drank 1 drink and never drank as much as 5 drinks for both former drinkers and lifetime abstainers when depression was measured as recent symptoms of depression but the J shape was found only for former drinkers when depression was measured as meeting the criteria for major depression and did not reach statistical significance in some analyses.
The results of the present study suggest that measurement and gender are key issues in interpreting findings on the relationship between alcohol and depression. First, depression is primarily related to drinking larger quantities per occasion, less related to volume, and unrelated to drinking frequency, and this effect is stronger for women than for men. Second, the overall relationship between depression and alcohol consumption is stronger for women than for men only when depression is measured as meeting a clinical diagnosis of major depression and not when measured as recent depressed affect. Finally, while there was some evidence that former drinkers had slightly higher rates of major depression and higher scores on recent depressed affect compared with light drinkers, there was no evidence that light drinking was protective for major depression when compared with lifetime abstainers, although light drinkers did report fewer recent symptoms of depressed affect.
关于酒精消费与抑郁症之间关系的研究结果并不一致,包括这种关系是呈J形还是U形,这可能至少部分归因于用于衡量酒精消费和抑郁症的测量方法类型。
我们采用随机数字拨号(RDD)和计算机辅助电话访谈(CATI)对6009名年龄在18至76岁的男性和8054名年龄在18至76岁的女性进行了一项普通人群调查。该调查包括4种酒精测量方法(频率、每次饮酒的通常量和最大量、饮酒量以及大量饮酒),涵盖过去一周和过去一年,以及2种抑郁症测量方法(符合DSM标准的重度抑郁症临床诊断、近期抑郁情绪)。
抑郁症与酒精消费之间的总体关系不因性别或抑郁症测量方法类型而有所不同,但因酒精测量方法类型而有显著差异,大量饮酒和每次饮酒量高时的关系最为强烈。抑郁症和酒精测量方法之间也存在显著的性别交互作用,当以符合重度抑郁症标准来衡量抑郁症且以每次饮酒量或大量饮酒来衡量酒精消费时,女性的关系比男性更强。有一些证据表明存在J形关系,即对于前饮酒者和终身戒酒者,当以近期抑郁症状来衡量抑郁症时,与通常饮用1杯酒且饮酒量从未达到5杯的人相比,戒酒者的抑郁症程度更高,但当以符合重度抑郁症标准来衡量抑郁症时,J形关系仅在前饮酒者中发现,并且在一些分析中未达到统计学显著性。
本研究结果表明,测量方法和性别是解释酒精与抑郁症关系研究结果的关键问题。首先,抑郁症主要与每次饮酒量较大有关,与饮酒量关系较小,与饮酒频率无关,并且这种影响在女性中比在男性中更强。其次,仅当以符合重度抑郁症临床诊断来衡量抑郁症时,抑郁症与酒精消费之间的总体关系在女性中比在男性中更强,而以近期抑郁情绪来衡量时则不然。最后,虽然有一些证据表明,与轻度饮酒者相比,前饮酒者患重度抑郁症的比例略高,近期抑郁情绪得分也更高,但没有证据表明与终身戒酒者相比,轻度饮酒对重度抑郁症有保护作用,尽管轻度饮酒者报告的近期抑郁情绪症状较少。