Department of Geriatrics, Center for Aging Brain, Memory Unit, University of Bari, Bari, Italy.
Am J Geriatr Psychiatry. 2010 Feb;18(2):98-116. doi: 10.1097/JGP.0b013e3181b0fa13.
Clinical and epidemiologic research has focused on the identification of risk factors that may be modified in predementia syndromes, at a preclinical and early clinical stage of dementing disorders, with specific attention to the role of depression. Our goal was to provide an overview of these studies and more specifically to describe the prevalence and incidence of depression in individuals with mild cognitive impairment (MCI), the possible impact of depressive symptoms on incident MCI, or its progression to dementia and the possible mechanisms behind the observed associations. Prevalence and incidence of depressive symptoms or syndromes in MCI vary as a result of different diagnostic criteria and different sampling and assessment procedures. The prevalence of depression in individuals with MCI was higher in hospital-based studies (median: 44.3%, range: 9%-83%) than in population-based studies (median: 15.7%, range: 3%-63%), reflecting different referral patterns and selection criteria. Incidence of depressive symptoms varied from 11.7 to 26.6/100 person-years in hospital-based and population-based studies. For depressed normal subjects and depressed patients with MCI, the findings on increased risk of incident MCI or its progression to dementia were conflicting. These contrasting findings suggested that the length of the follow-up period, the study design, the sample population, and methodological differences may be central for detecting an association between baseline depression and subsequent development of MCI or its progression to dementia. Assuming that MCI may be the earliest identifiable clinical stage of dementia, depressive symptoms may be an early manifestation rather than a risk factor for dementia and Alzheimer disease, arguing that the underlying neuropathological condition that causes MCI or dementia also causes depressive symptoms. In this scenario, at least in certain subsets of elderly patients, late-life depression, MCI, and dementia could represent a possible clinical continuum.
临床和流行病学研究侧重于确定可能在痴呆前综合征中发生变化的危险因素,即在痴呆障碍的临床前和早期阶段,特别关注抑郁的作用。我们的目标是提供这些研究的概述,更具体地描述轻度认知障碍 (MCI) 个体中抑郁的患病率和发病率、抑郁症状对新发 MCI 的可能影响或其向痴呆的进展以及观察到的关联背后的可能机制。由于不同的诊断标准和不同的抽样和评估程序,MCI 中抑郁症状或综合征的患病率和发病率有所不同。在基于医院的研究中,MCI 个体中抑郁的患病率较高(中位数:44.3%,范围:9%-83%),而在基于人群的研究中则较低(中位数:15.7%,范围:3%-63%),反映出不同的转诊模式和选择标准。在基于医院和基于人群的研究中,抑郁症状的发病率从 11.7 到 26.6/100 人年不等。对于抑郁的正常受试者和抑郁的 MCI 患者,关于新发 MCI 或向痴呆进展的风险增加的发现相互矛盾。这些相互矛盾的发现表明,随访期的长短、研究设计、样本人群和方法学差异可能是检测基线抑郁与随后发生 MCI 或向痴呆进展之间关联的关键。假设 MCI 可能是痴呆的最早可识别的临床阶段,抑郁症状可能是痴呆和阿尔茨海默病的早期表现而不是危险因素,这表明导致 MCI 或痴呆的潜在神经病理学状况也导致了抑郁症状。在这种情况下,至少在某些老年患者亚组中,晚年抑郁、MCI 和痴呆可能代表一种可能的临床连续体。