Miller Jacob A, Derakhshan Adeeb, Lubelski Daniel, Alvin Matthew D, McGirt Matthew J, Benzel Edward C, Mroz Thomas E
Cleveland Clinic Center for Spine Health, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave., S40, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA; Cleveland Clinic Lerner College of Medicine, 9500 Euclid Ave., NA41, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA.
Cleveland Clinic Center for Spine Health, Cleveland Clinic, 9500 Euclid Ave., S40, Cleveland, OH 44195, USA; Case Western Reserve University School of Medicine, 10900 Euclid Ave., Cleveland, OH 44106, USA.
Spine J. 2015 Jan 1;15(1):58-64. doi: 10.1016/j.spinee.2014.06.020. Epub 2014 Jul 4.
Some, smaller studies have investigated the effect of preoperative depression on postoperative improvement in quality of life (QOL). However, they have not used the Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9) in self-reported depression.
To assess the effect of preoperative depression as measured by the PHQ-9 on postoperative improvement in QOL.
A retrospective review at a single tertiary-care referral center.
Patients who underwent lumbar decompression or fusion between 2008 and 2012.
A self-reported EuroQol five-dimensions (EQ-5D) quality-adjusted life-years Index.
Quality of life data were collected using the institutional prospectively collected database of patient-reported health status measures. The EQ-5D questionnare, PDQ, and PHQ-9 were used. Linear and logistic regression analyses were performed to assess the impact of preoperative depression on QOL improvement.
Elevated preoperative pain (PDQ, β=-0.0017, p=.0009) and worsened depression (PHQ-9, β=-0.0044, p=.0359) were significantly associated with diminished postoperative improvement in QOL, as measured by the EQ-5D. Furthermore, greater depression (PHQ-9, odds ratio [OR] 0.93, p<.0001) and pain (PDQ, OR 0.99, p=.02) were associated with significantly diminished postoperative improvement exceeding the minimum clinically important difference.
Increased preoperative pain and depression were shown to be associated with significantly reduced improvement in postoperative QOL, as measured by the EQ-5D.
一些规模较小的研究探讨了术前抑郁对术后生活质量(QOL)改善的影响。然而,这些研究在自我报告的抑郁情况中未使用患者健康问卷9(PHQ-9)。
评估通过PHQ-9测量的术前抑郁对术后QOL改善的影响。
在一家单一的三级医疗转诊中心进行回顾性研究。
2008年至2012年间接受腰椎减压或融合手术的患者。
自我报告的欧洲五维健康量表(EQ-5D)质量调整生命年指数。
使用机构前瞻性收集的患者报告健康状况测量数据库收集生活质量数据。使用了EQ-5D问卷、患者健康问卷(PDQ)和PHQ-9。进行线性和逻辑回归分析以评估术前抑郁对QOL改善的影响。
术前疼痛加剧(PDQ,β=-0.0017,p=0.0009)和抑郁加重(PHQ-9,β=-0.0044,p=0.0359)与通过EQ-5D测量的术后QOL改善减少显著相关。此外,更严重的抑郁(PHQ-9,比值比[OR]0.93,p<0.0001)和疼痛(PDQ,OR 0.99,p=0.02)与超过最小临床重要差异的术后改善显著减少相关。
术前疼痛和抑郁增加与通过EQ-5D测量的术后QOL改善显著降低相关。