Mykletun Arnstein, Bjerkeset Ottar, Dewey Michael, Prince Martin, Overland Simon, Stewart Robert
Faculty of Psychology, Research Centre for Health Promotion, University of Bergen, Norway.
Psychosom Med. 2007 May;69(4):323-31. doi: 10.1097/PSY.0b013e31803cb862. Epub 2007 Apr 30.
To investigate empirically the association between anxiety/depression and cause-specific mortality with particular attention to the underlying mechanisms and causes of death. Depression reportedly increases general mortality. For cause-specific mortality, there is evidence depression has an effect on cardiovascular disease (CVD) mortality and suicide. Less information is known as to other mortality diagnoses. There is scarce and conflicting literature on anxiety in relation to mortality.
Employing a historical cohort design, we used a link between an epidemiological cohort study and a comprehensive national mortality database. We gathered baseline information on physical and mental health (Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, HADS) from the population-based health study (n = 61,349). Causes of death were registered with International Classification of Diagnoses, 10th edition (ICD-10) during mean follow-up of 4.4 years.
Case-level depression increased the mortality rate for all major disease-related causes of death, whereas case-level anxiety and comorbid anxiety/depression did not. The effect of depression was similar for cardiac mortality compared with all other causes combined, and confounding effects were also very similar. Symptom load of anxiety was associated negatively with both CVD and other cause mortality in fully adjusted models. Accidents and suicide were associated primarily with comorbid anxiety/depression.
Depression is a risk factor for all major disease-related causes of death; it is not limited to CVD mortality or suicide. Because the association between depression and cardiac mortality was comparable to the other causes of death combined and confounding and mediating factors were markedly similar, future investigation as to the mechanisms underlying the effect of depression on mortality should not be limited to CVD mortality.
通过实证研究焦虑/抑郁与特定病因死亡率之间的关联,特别关注潜在机制和死亡原因。据报道,抑郁症会增加总体死亡率。对于特定病因死亡率,有证据表明抑郁症会影响心血管疾病(CVD)死亡率和自杀率。关于其他死亡率诊断的信息较少。关于焦虑与死亡率的文献稀少且相互矛盾。
采用历史队列设计,我们利用了一项流行病学队列研究与一个全面的国家死亡率数据库之间的联系。我们从基于人群的健康研究(n = 61,349)中收集了关于身心健康的基线信息(医院焦虑和抑郁量表,HADS)。在平均4.4年的随访期间,使用国际疾病分类第10版(ICD - 10)记录死亡原因。
病例级别的抑郁症会增加所有主要疾病相关死因的死亡率,而病例级别的焦虑症以及焦虑/抑郁共病情况则不会。与所有其他死因综合相比,抑郁症对心脏死亡率的影响相似,混杂效应也非常相似。在完全调整模型中,焦虑症状负荷与心血管疾病和其他死因死亡率均呈负相关。事故和自杀主要与焦虑/抑郁共病相关。
抑郁症是所有主要疾病相关死因的危险因素;它不限于心血管疾病死亡率或自杀。由于抑郁症与心脏死亡率之间的关联与其他死因综合情况相当,且混杂和中介因素明显相似,未来关于抑郁症对死亡率影响的潜在机制的研究不应仅限于心血管疾病死亡率。