Gilman Stephen E, Sucha Ewa, Kingsbury Mila, Horton Nicholas J, Murphy Jane M, Colman Ian
Health Behavior Branch, Division of Intramural Population Health Research (Gilman), Eunice Kennedy Shriver National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethesda, Md.; Department of Mental Health (Gilman), Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, Baltimore, Md.; Department of Mathematics and Statistics (Sucha), and School of Epidemiology and Public Health (Sucha, Kingsbury), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.; Department of Mathematics and Statistics (Horton), Amherst College, Amherst, Mass.; Department of Psychiatry (Murphy), Massachusetts General Hospital and Harvard Medical School; Department of Epidemiology (Murphy), Harvard TH Chan School of Public Health, Boston, Mass.; Department of Psychiatry (Murphy), Dalhousie University Faculty of Medicine, Halifax, NS; School of Epidemiology, Public Health & Preventive Medicine (Colman), University of Ottawa, Ottawa, Ont.
CMAJ. 2017 Oct 23;189(42):E1304-E1310. doi: 10.1503/cmaj.170125.
Many studies have shown that depression increases mortality risk. We aimed to investigate the duration of time over which depression is associated with increased risk of mortality, secular trends in the association between depression and mortality, and sex differences in the association between depression and mortality.
We conducted a cohort study of 3410 adults enrolled in 3 representative samples of a county in Atlantic Canada in 1952 ( = 1003), 1970 ( = 1203) or 1992 ( = 1402) (the Stirling County Study). Depression was measured using a diagnostic algorithm based on the presence of depressed mood and associated symptoms, duration of more than 1 month, and substantial impairment. Vital status of participants through 2011 was determined using probabilistic linkages to the Canadian Mortality Database.
Depression was associated with a heightened risk of mortality among men during the 3 time periods of the study, with hazard ratios (HRs) of 2.90 (95% confidence interval [CI] 1.69-4.98) between 1952 and 1967, 1.97 (CI 1.34-2.89) between 1968 and 1990, and 1.52 (CI 1.09-2.13) between 1991 and 2011. Elevated risk of mortality was noted among women only between 1990 and 2011 (HR = 1.51; CI = 1.11-2.05).
The association between depression and mortality persists over long periods of time and has emerged among women in recent decades, despite contemporaneous improvements in the treatment of depression and reduction of stigma associated with depression. Further research is needed to better understand the mechanisms involved.
许多研究表明,抑郁症会增加死亡风险。我们旨在调查抑郁症与死亡风险增加相关的持续时间、抑郁症与死亡率之间关联的长期趋势,以及抑郁症与死亡率之间关联的性别差异。
我们对1952年(n = 1003)、1970年(n = 1203)或1992年(n = 1402)在加拿大新斯科舍省一个县的3个代表性样本中登记的3410名成年人进行了队列研究(斯特林县研究)。抑郁症通过基于抑郁情绪及相关症状的存在、持续时间超过1个月以及严重损害的诊断算法进行测量。通过与加拿大死亡率数据库的概率性关联确定了参与者截至201年的生命状态。
在研究的3个时间段内,抑郁症与男性死亡率升高相关,1952年至1967年期间风险比(HR)为2.90(95%置信区间[CI] 1.69 - 4.98),1968年至1990年期间为1.97(CI 1.34 - 2.89),1991年至2011年期间为1.52(CI 1.09 - 2.13)。仅在1990年至2011年期间女性死亡率出现升高(HR = 1.51;CI = 1.11 - 2.05)。
尽管在抑郁症治疗方面同时取得了进展且与抑郁症相关的污名有所减少,但抑郁症与死亡率之间的关联长期存在,并且在近几十年中出现在女性中。需要进一步研究以更好地理解其中涉及的机制。