Faller Hermann, Störk Stefan, Gelbrich Götz, Schowalter Marion, Ertl Georg, Angermann Christiane E
University of Würzburg, Department of Medical Psychology, Medical Sociology, and Rehabilitation Sciences, Würzburg, Germany.
University of Würzburg, Department of Internal Medicine I, Würzburg, Germany; Comprehensive Heart Failure Center, Würzburg, Germany.
J Psychosom Res. 2015 Jun;78(6):569-72. doi: 10.1016/j.jpsychores.2015.02.015. Epub 2015 Mar 7.
The prognostic potential of depressive symptoms independent of somatic features of heart failure severity has repeatedly been demonstrated. However, patient-reported functional status has rarely been accounted for in these studies. Thus, it has remained unclear to what extent the predictive power of depressive symptoms may mirror functional status. We therefore aimed to evaluate the prognostic value of depressive symptoms adjusting for patient-reported functional status in a large, well-characterized sample of patients with systolic heart failure.
Eight hundred sixty-three patients, 67±12 years old, 72% men, and 42% with New York Heart Association functional classes III/IV, who participated in the extended Interdisciplinary Network Heart Failure (INH) study were investigated. We assessed depressive symptoms using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) and patient-reported functional status with the Kansas City Cardiomyopathy Questionnaire (KCCQ). Data on survival was obtained after a follow-up of 18 months (100% complete).
Depressive symptoms predicted mortality risk (HR per PHQ-9 scale point=1.07, 95% CI 1.04-1.09, p<.001), even after adjustment for heart failure severity and co-morbidities (HR=1.04, 95% CI 1.01-1.07, p=.017). However, they were no longer significant predictors (HR=1.01, 95% CI 0.98-1.05, p=0.46) after additional adjustment for patient-reported functional status, which proved predictive of mortality risk (HR=0.90, 95% CI 0.82-0.99, p=.025).
Our results suggest that the association of depressive symptoms with functional status may at least partly explain the prognostic potential of depressive symptoms.
抑郁症状独立于心力衰竭严重程度的躯体特征的预后潜力已得到反复证实。然而,这些研究很少考虑患者报告的功能状态。因此,抑郁症状的预测能力在多大程度上可能反映功能状态仍不清楚。因此,我们旨在评估在一个大型、特征明确的收缩性心力衰竭患者样本中,调整患者报告的功能状态后抑郁症状的预后价值。
对863名患者进行了调查,这些患者年龄为67±12岁,男性占72%,42%患有纽约心脏协会功能分级III/IV级,他们参与了扩展的跨学科网络心力衰竭(INH)研究。我们使用患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)评估抑郁症状,并使用堪萨斯城心肌病问卷(KCCQ)评估患者报告的功能状态。在随访18个月(100%完成)后获得生存数据。
即使在调整心力衰竭严重程度和合并症后,抑郁症状仍可预测死亡风险(每PHQ-9量表评分点的HR=1.07,95%CI 1.04-1.09,p<0.001)。然而,在进一步调整患者报告的功能状态后,它们不再是显著的预测因素(HR=1.01,95%CI 0.98-1.05,p=0.46),而患者报告的功能状态被证明可预测死亡风险(HR=0.90,95%CI 0.82-0.99,p=0.025)。
我们的结果表明抑郁症状与功能状态之间的关联可能至少部分解释了抑郁症状的预后潜力。