Barlinn Kristian, Kepplinger Jessica, Puetz Volker, Illigens Ben M, Bodechtel Ulf, Siepmann Timo
Department of Neurology, University Hospital Carl Gustav Carus Dresden, University of Technology Dresden, Dresden, Germany.
Department of Neurology, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Neuropsychiatr Dis Treat. 2014 Dec 18;11:1-14. doi: 10.2147/NDT.S63904. eCollection 2015.
There is growing evidence that depression increases the risk of incident stroke. However, few studies have considered possible residual confounding effects by preexistent cerebrovascular and cardiac diseases. Therefore, we synthesized data from cohort studies to explore whether depressed individuals free of cerebrovascular and cardiac diseases are at higher risk of incident stroke. We searched the electronic databases PubMed and Medline for eligible cohort studies that examined the prospective association between depression and first-ever stroke. A random-effects model was used for quantitative data synthesis. Sensitivity analyses comprised cohort studies that considered a lag period with exclusion of incident strokes in the first years of follow-up to minimize residual confounding by preexistent silent strokes and excluded cardiac disease at baseline. Overall, we identified 28 cohort studies with 681,139 participants and 13,436 (1.97%) incident stroke cases. The pooled risk estimate revealed an increased risk of incident stroke for depression (relative risk 1.40, 95% confidence interval [CI] 1.27-1.53; P<0.0001). When we excluded incident strokes that occurred in the first years of follow-up, the prospective association between depression and incident stroke remained significant (relative risk 1.64, 95% CI 1.27-2.11; P<0.0001). This positive association also remained after we considered only studies with individuals with cardiac disease at baseline excluded (relative risk 1.43, 95% CI 1.19-1.72; P<0.0001). The prospective association of depression and increased risk of first-ever stroke demonstrated in this meta-analysis appears to be driven neither by preexistence of clinically apparent cerebrovascular and cardiovascular diseases nor by silent stroke.
越来越多的证据表明,抑郁症会增加发生中风的风险。然而,很少有研究考虑到既往脑血管和心脏疾病可能产生的残余混杂效应。因此,我们综合了队列研究的数据,以探讨没有脑血管和心脏疾病的抑郁症患者发生中风的风险是否更高。我们在电子数据库PubMed和Medline中搜索了符合条件的队列研究,这些研究考察了抑郁症与首次中风之间的前瞻性关联。采用随机效应模型进行定量数据合成。敏感性分析包括考虑了滞后期的队列研究,排除了随访最初几年发生的中风,以尽量减少既往无症状中风的残余混杂效应,并在基线时排除了心脏病。总体而言,我们确定了28项队列研究,涉及681,139名参与者和13,436例(1.97%)中风病例。汇总风险估计显示,抑郁症患者发生中风的风险增加(相对风险1.40,95%置信区间[CI]1.27 - 1.53;P<0.0001)。当我们排除随访最初几年发生的中风时,抑郁症与中风之间的前瞻性关联仍然显著(相对风险1.64,95%CI 1.27 - 2.11;P<0.0001)。在我们仅考虑排除了基线时有心脏病个体的研究后,这种正相关仍然存在(相对风险1.43,95%CI 1.19 - 1.72;P<0.0001)。这项荟萃分析中所显示的抑郁症与首次中风风险增加之间的前瞻性关联,似乎既不是由临床明显的脑血管和心血管疾病的既往存在所驱动,也不是由无症状中风所驱动。