Fazel Seena, Wolf Achim, Chang Zheng, Larsson Henrik, Goodwin Guy M, Lichtenstein Paul
Lancet Psychiatry. 2015 Mar;2(3):224-32. doi: 10.1016/S2215-0366(14)00128-X.
Depression increases the risk of a range of adverse outcomes including suicide, premature mortality, and self-harm, but associations with violent crime remain uncertain. We aimed to determine the risks of violent crime in patients with depression and to investigate the association between depressive symptoms and violent crime in a cohort of twins.
We conducted two studies. The first was a total population study in Sweden of patients with outpatient diagnoses of depressive disorders (n=47,158) between 2001 and 2009 and no lifetime inpatient episodes. Patients were age and sex matched to general population controls (n=898,454) and risk of violent crime was calculated. Additionally, we compared the odds of violent crime in unaffected half-siblings (n=15,534) and full siblings (n=33,516) of patients with the general population controls. In sensitivity analyses, we examined the contribution of substance abuse, sociodemographic factors, and previous criminality. In the second study, we studied a general population sample of twins (n=23,020) with continuous measures of depressive symptoms for risk of violent crime.
During a mean follow-up period of 3·2 years, 641 (3·7%) of the depressed men and 152 (0·5%) of the depressed women violently offended after diagnosis. After adjustment for sociodemographic confounders, the odds ratio of violent crime was 3·0 (95% CI 2·8–3·3) compared with the general population controls. The odds of violent crime in half-siblings (adjusted odds ratio 1·2 [95% CI 1·1–1·4]) and full siblings (1·5, 95% CI 1·3–1·6) were significantly increased, showing some familial confounding of the association between depression and violence. However, the odds increase remained significant in individuals with depression after adjustment for familial confounding, and in those without substance abuse comorbidity or a previous violent conviction (all p<0·0001). In the twin study, during the mean follow-up time of 5·4 years, 88 violent crimes were recorded. Depressive symptoms were associated with increased risk of violent crime and a sensitivity analysis identified little difference in risk estimate when all crimes (violent and non-violent) was the outcome.
Risk of violent crime was increased in individuals with depression after adjustment for familial, sociodemographic and individual factors in two longitudinal studies. Clinical guidelines should consider recommending violence risk assessment in certain subgroups with depression.
Wellcome Trust and the Swedish Research Council.
抑郁症会增加一系列不良后果的风险,包括自杀、过早死亡和自我伤害,但与暴力犯罪之间的关联仍不明确。我们旨在确定抑郁症患者暴力犯罪的风险,并在一组双胞胎队列中研究抑郁症状与暴力犯罪之间的关联。
我们进行了两项研究。第一项是在瑞典对2001年至2009年间门诊诊断为抑郁症(n = 47158)且无终身住院史的患者进行的全人群研究。患者按年龄和性别与一般人群对照(n = 898454)匹配,并计算暴力犯罪风险。此外,我们比较了患者的未受影响的同父异母或同母异父兄弟姐妹(n = 15534)和同胞兄弟姐妹(n = 33516)与一般人群对照的暴力犯罪几率。在敏感性分析中,我们研究了药物滥用、社会人口学因素和既往犯罪史的影响。在第二项研究中,我们对一组双胞胎(n = 23020)进行了一般人群样本研究,通过对抑郁症状的连续测量来评估暴力犯罪风险。
在平均3.2年的随访期内,641名(3.7%)抑郁男性和152名(0.5%)抑郁女性在诊断后实施了暴力犯罪。在调整社会人口学混杂因素后,与一般人群对照相比,暴力犯罪的优势比为3.0(95%CI 2.8 - 3.3)。同父异母或同母异父兄弟姐妹(调整后的优势比1.2 [95%CI 1.1 - 1.4])和同胞兄弟姐妹(1.5,95%CI 1.3 - 1.)的暴力犯罪几率显著增加,表明抑郁症与暴力之间的关联存在一定的家族混杂因素。然而,在调整家族混杂因素后,抑郁症患者的几率增加仍然显著,在没有药物滥用合并症或既往暴力定罪的患者中也是如此(所有p < 0.0001)。在双胞胎研究中,在平均5.4年的随访期内,记录了88起暴力犯罪。抑郁症状与暴力犯罪风险增加相关,敏感性分析表明当所有犯罪(暴力和非暴力)作为结果时,风险估计差异不大。
在两项纵向研究中,调整家族、社会人口学和个体因素后,抑郁症患者的暴力犯罪风险增加。临床指南应考虑建议对某些抑郁症亚组进行暴力风险评估。
惠康信托基金会和瑞典研究理事会。