Vietri Jeffrey, Otsubo Tempei, Montgomery William, Tsuji Toshinaga, Harada Eiji
Kantar Health, Health Outcomes Practice, Via Paleocapa 7, 20121, Milan, Italy.
Tokyo Shinjuku Medical Center, Tokyo, Japan.
BMC Psychiatry. 2015 May 7;15:104. doi: 10.1186/s12888-015-0488-8.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a chronic mental illness which affects an estimated 3% of the Japanese population. Many patients with MDD report painful physical symptoms, and research outside of Japan suggests such patients may represent a subtype of depression which is more severe and difficult to treat. There is no evidence available about the characteristics or incremental burden of these patients in Japan. The objective of this study was to quantify the incremental burden of physical pain among individuals in Japan diagnosed with depression.
Data for individuals age 18 and older who reported a physician diagnosis of depression were obtained from the Japan National Health and Wellness Survey (NHWS). Respondents who also reported physical pain were matched to respondents who did not report pain using propensity scores and compared using bivariate statistics. Measures included Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) for depression severity, Medical Outcomes Study 12-Item Short Form Survey Instrument (SF-12v2) for health-related quality of life, the Work Productivity and Activity Impairment (WPAI) for work and activity impairment, and 6-month report of health care use.
Individuals with depression who reported physical pain had higher PHQ-9 depression scores (14.3 vs. 11.1, p<0.001), lower health-related quality of life (Mental Component Summary score [MCS] 29.1 vs. 32.0, p<0.01; Physical Component Summary score [PCS] 43.0 vs. 47.2, p<0.001; health utility [SF-6D] 0.567 vs. 0.613, p<0.001), more presenteeism (46.3% vs. 36.8%, p<0.01), more overall work impairment (51.4% vs. 42.3%, p<0.01), more activity impairment (55.4% vs. 43.9%, p<0.001), and reported using more health care provider visits in the prior 6 months (17.7 vs. 12.8, p<0.01) as well as hospitalizations (1.7 vs. 0.8, p<0.05) relative to propensity-score matched controls without pain. Absenteeism (13.1% vs. 11.4%, p=0.51) and emergency room visits (0.31 vs. 0.35, p=0.76) were not significantly different between the two matched groups.
Individuals whose depression is accompanied by physical pain have a higher burden of illness than those whose depression does not include physical pain. Clinicians should take the presence of pain into account and consider treating both the physical and emotional symptoms of these patients.
重度抑郁症(MDD)是一种慢性精神疾病,据估计影响着3%的日本人口。许多MDD患者报告有身体疼痛症状,日本以外的研究表明,这类患者可能代表了一种更严重且更难治疗的抑郁症亚型。目前尚无关于日本这类患者的特征或额外负担的证据。本研究的目的是量化日本被诊断为抑郁症的个体中身体疼痛的额外负担。
从日本国民健康与福祉调查(NHWS)中获取18岁及以上报告医生诊断为抑郁症的个体的数据。将报告有身体疼痛的受访者与未报告疼痛的受访者使用倾向得分进行匹配,并通过双变量统计进行比较。测量指标包括用于评估抑郁严重程度的患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)、用于评估与健康相关生活质量的医学结局研究12项简短调查问卷工具(SF-12v2)、用于评估工作和活动受损情况的工作效率和活动受损量表(WPAI),以及过去6个月的医疗保健使用报告。
报告有身体疼痛的抑郁症患者的PHQ-9抑郁评分更高(14.3对11.1,p<0.001),与健康相关的生活质量更低(精神成分汇总评分[MCS]29.1对32.0,p<0.01;身体成分汇总评分[PCS]43.0对47.2,p<0.001;健康效用[SF-6D]0.567对0.613,p<0.001),出勤主义更严重(46.3%对36.8%,p<0.01),总体工作受损更严重(51.4%对42.3%,p<0.01),活动受损更严重(55.4%对43.9%,p<0.001),并且报告在过去6个月中使用医疗保健服务的次数更多(17.7次对12.8次,p<0.01)以及住院次数更多(1.7次对0.8次,p<0.05),相对于倾向得分匹配的无疼痛对照组。两组匹配组之间的旷工率(13.1%对11.4%,p=0.51)和急诊就诊次数(0.31次对0.35次,p=0.76)没有显著差异。
抑郁症伴有身体疼痛的个体比抑郁症不伴有身体疼痛的个体疾病负担更高。临床医生应考虑到疼痛的存在,并考虑治疗这些患者的身体和情绪症状。