Boulware L Ebony, Liu Yongmei, Fink Nancy E, Coresh Josef, Ford Daniel E, Klag Michael J, Powe Neil R
Division of General Internal Medicine, Department of Medicine, Johns Hopkins School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Clin J Am Soc Nephrol. 2006 May;1(3):496-504. doi: 10.2215/CJN.00030505. Epub 2006 Mar 1.
Temporal relationships among depression, medical comorbidity, and death or cardiovascular disease (CVD) events are complex. Clarifying temporal relationships may enhance current insight regarding the nature of the association of depression with poor outcomes. The temporal relation of depression symptoms (DS; score < or = 52 on five-item Mental Health Index) assessed at 6-mo intervals for 2 yr to CVD event, all-cause death, cardiovascular disease deaths, and non-cardiovascular disease deaths was studied in 917 incident dialysis patients. Cox regression models were used to assess whether the proximity of DS measurement and DS duration would change observed associations between DS and events. Whether increasing medical comorbidity was associated with worsening DS also was assessed. In time-varying models, DS were strongly associated with all-cause deaths, cardiovascular disease deaths, and CVD events (adjusted relative hazard [95% confidence interval]: 2.22 [1.36 to 3.60], 3.27 [1.57 to 6.81], and 1.68 [1.05 to 2.69], respectively). Persistent and current DS were associated with greater risks for all-cause death. Incorporating a 6-mo time lag between DS and outcomes attenuated risks for all-cause death, non-cardiovascular disease deaths, and CVD events. In a subgroup analysis, patients with worsening medical comorbidity (n = 32) during the first year of follow-up experienced a 2.42-point greater decline in mental health scores at 2 yr of follow-up compared with patients with no worsening in medical comorbidity (n = 123), but findings were not statistically significant. DS are strongly related to death and CVD events, with persistent/current DS most strongly associated with poor outcomes. Attenuated risks from time-lag analyses indicate a partial role for reverse causality, suggesting that medical comorbidity may precede DS.
抑郁症、合并症与死亡或心血管疾病(CVD)事件之间的时间关系很复杂。明确时间关系可能会增强目前对抑郁症与不良结局关联本质的认识。在917例新发透析患者中,研究了每6个月评估一次、持续2年的抑郁症状(DS;五项心理健康指数得分≤52)与CVD事件、全因死亡、心血管疾病死亡和非心血管疾病死亡之间的时间关系。采用Cox回归模型评估DS测量的时间接近程度和DS持续时间是否会改变观察到的DS与事件之间的关联。还评估了合并症增加是否与DS恶化相关。在时变模型中,DS与全因死亡、心血管疾病死亡和CVD事件密切相关(调整后的相对风险[95%置信区间]:分别为2.22[1.36至3.60]、3.27[1.57至6.81]和1.68[1.05至2.69])。持续性和当前的DS与全因死亡风险增加相关。在DS与结局之间纳入6个月的时间滞后可降低全因死亡、非心血管疾病死亡和CVD事件的风险。在亚组分析中,随访第一年合并症恶化的患者(n = 32)在随访2年时心理健康得分的下降幅度比合并症未恶化的患者(n = 123)大2.42分,但结果无统计学意义。DS与死亡和CVD事件密切相关,持续性/当前的DS与不良结局关联最为密切。时间滞后分析显示风险降低表明反向因果关系起了部分作用,提示合并症可能先于DS出现。