Whang William, Kubzansky Laura D, Kawachi Ichiro, Rexrode Kathryn M, Kroenke Candyce H, Glynn Robert J, Garan Hasan, Albert Christine M
Division of Cardiology, Columbia University Medical Center, 180 Fort Washington Avenue, New York, NY 10032, USA.
J Am Coll Cardiol. 2009 Mar 17;53(11):950-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jacc.2008.10.060.
We assessed the association between depression and sudden cardiac death (SCD) and cardiac events among individuals without baseline coronary heart disease (CHD).
Depression is a risk factor for cardiac events and mortality among those with CHD, possibly from arrhythmia.
We studied depressive symptoms and a proxy variable for clinical depression consisting of severe symptoms and/or antidepressant medication use and their relationship to cardiac events in the Nurses' Health Study. Questionnaires in 1992, 1996, and 2000 assessed symptoms with the Mental Health Index (MHI-5), and antidepressant use was assessed in 1996 and 2000. Primary end points included SCD, fatal CHD, and nonfatal myocardial infarction.
Among 63,469 women without prior CHD/stroke in 1992, 7.9% had MHI-5 scores <53, previously found to predict clinical depression. Depressive symptoms were associated with CHD events, and the relationship was strongest for fatal CHD, where the association remained significant even after controlling for CHD risk factors (hazard ratio [HR]: 1.49; 95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.11 to 2.00 for MHI-5 score <53). In models from 1996 onward, our proxy variable for clinical depression was most associated with SCD in multivariable models (HR: 2.33, 95% CI: 1.47 to 3.70), and this risk was primarily due to a specific relationship between antidepressant use and SCD (HR: 3.34, 95% CI: 2.03 to 5.50).
In this cohort of women without baseline CHD, depressive symptoms were associated with fatal CHD, and a measure of clinical depression including antidepressant use was specifically associated with SCD. Although antidepressant use might be a marker of worse depression, its specific association with SCD merits further study.
我们评估了无基线冠心病(CHD)个体中抑郁症与心源性猝死(SCD)及心脏事件之间的关联。
抑郁症是冠心病患者发生心脏事件和死亡的危险因素,可能源于心律失常。
我们在护士健康研究中研究了抑郁症状以及由严重症状和/或使用抗抑郁药物组成的临床抑郁症替代变量,及其与心脏事件的关系。1992年、1996年和2000年的问卷使用心理健康指数(MHI-5)评估症状,1996年和2000年评估抗抑郁药物的使用情况。主要终点包括心源性猝死、致命性冠心病和非致命性心肌梗死。
在1992年无既往冠心病/中风的63469名女性中,7.9%的MHI-5得分<53,此前发现该得分可预测临床抑郁症。抑郁症状与冠心病事件相关,对于致命性冠心病,这种关系最为强烈,即使在控制了冠心病危险因素后,该关联仍具有显著性(风险比[HR]:1.49;95%置信区间[CI]:MHI-5得分<53时为1.11至2.00)。在1996年及之后的模型中,我们的临床抑郁症替代变量在多变量模型中与心源性猝死的关联最为密切(HR:2.33,95%CI:1.47至3.70),这种风险主要归因于抗抑郁药物使用与心源性猝死之间的特定关系(HR:3.34,95%CI:2.03至5.50)。
在这个无基线冠心病的女性队列中,则抑郁症状与致命性冠心病相关,一项包括抗抑郁药物使用情况的临床抑郁症指标与心源性猝死有特定关联。尽管使用抗抑郁药物可能是更严重抑郁症的一个标志,但其与心源性猝死的特定关联值得进一步研究。