National Institute for Health & Medical Research, INSERM, U1018, Centre for Research in Epidemiology and Population Health, Hôpital Paul Brousse, Bât 15/16, 16 Ave Paul Vaillant Couturier, 94807 Villejuif Cedex, France.
J Clin Psychiatry. 2010 Oct;71(10):1379-85. doi: 10.4088/JCP.09m05349gry. Epub 2010 Jun 1.
Depression has been widely linked to poor cognition and dementia in the elderly. However, comorbidity at older ages does not allow an assessment of the role of mental health as a risk factor for cognitive outcomes. We examined the association between depressive symptoms, measured 6 times over an 18-year period, and cognitive deficits in late midlife.
Of the 10,308 participants in the Whitehall II study, 4,271 men and women (aged 35-55 years at baseline) were followed up for 18 years, during which depressive symptoms were assessed 6 times using the General Health Questionnaire depression subscale. The follow-up was from 1985-1988 to 2002-2004. Cognition was assessed at the most recent wave (2002-2004, mean age 61 years, range 50-74 years) using 6 tests: memory, reasoning, vocabulary, 2 tests of verbal fluency, and the MMSE (Mini Mental State Examination). Cognitive deficit was defined as MMSE score <28 and performance in the worst sex-specific quintile for the other tests.
History of depressive symptoms, once or more in the 6 times assessed, had a weak association with some of the cognitive tests. However, in analysis adjusted for sociodemographic variables, diabetes, coronary heart disease, hypertension, stroke, and antidepressant use, persistent depressive symptoms (4-6 times) were associated with cognitive deficits on all tests: memory (OR=1.91; 95% CI, 1.36-2.67), reasoning (OR=1.60; 95% CI, 1.15-2.20), vocabulary (OR=1.75; 95% CI, 1.27-2.41), phonemic fluency (OR=1.40; 95% CI, 1.00-1.94), semantic fluency (OR=1.68; 95% CI, 1.20-2.35), and the MMSE (OR=1.76; 95% CI, 1.25-2.50).
Our data show that depressive episodes tend to persist in some individuals, and these individuals are at a greater risk of cognitive deficits in late midlife.
抑郁与老年人认知能力下降和痴呆密切相关。然而,老年人的共病情况不允许评估心理健康作为认知结局的风险因素。我们研究了 18 年期间 6 次测量的抑郁症状与中老年后期认知缺陷之间的关系。
在白厅 II 研究的 10308 名参与者中,4271 名男性和女性(基线时年龄 35-55 岁)随访 18 年,期间使用一般健康问卷抑郁量表 6 次评估抑郁症状。随访时间为 1985-1988 年至 2002-2004 年。认知功能在最近的波次(2002-2004 年,平均年龄 61 岁,范围 50-74 岁)进行评估,使用 6 项测试:记忆力、推理能力、词汇量、2 项语言流畅性测试和 MMSE(简易精神状态检查)。认知缺陷定义为 MMSE 评分<28 分和其他测试中最差性别五分位数的表现。
曾经或多次出现抑郁症状与一些认知测试呈弱相关。然而,在调整了社会人口统计学变量、糖尿病、冠心病、高血压、中风和抗抑郁药使用情况后,持续的抑郁症状(4-6 次)与所有测试的认知缺陷相关:记忆力(OR=1.91;95%CI,1.36-2.67)、推理能力(OR=1.60;95%CI,1.15-2.20)、词汇量(OR=1.75;95%CI,1.27-2.41)、语音流畅性(OR=1.40;95%CI,1.00-1.94)、语义流畅性(OR=1.68;95%CI,1.20-2.35)和 MMSE(OR=1.76;95%CI,1.25-2.50)。
我们的数据表明,抑郁发作往往在一些人身上持续存在,这些人在中老年后期认知缺陷的风险更高。