The Center for Cognitive Medicine, Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Vanderbilt University Medical Center, Nashville, TN, USA.
Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, NC, USA.
Depress Anxiety. 2018 Jul;35(7):658-667. doi: 10.1002/da.22772. Epub 2018 May 10.
Late-life depression (LLD) is associated with a fragile antidepressant response and high recurrence risk. This study examined what measures predict recurrence in remitted LLD.
Individuals of age 60 years or older with a Diagnostic and Statistical Manual - IV (DSM-IV) diagnosis of major depressive disorder were enrolled in the neurocognitive outcomes of depression in the elderly study. Participants received manualized antidepressant treatment and were followed longitudinally for an average of 5 years. Study analyses included participants who remitted. Measures included demographic and clinical measures, medical comorbidity, disability, life stress, social support, and neuropsychological testing. A subset underwent structural magnetic resonance imaging (MRI).
Of 241 remitted elders, approximately over 4 years, 137 (56.8%) experienced recurrence and 104 (43.2%) maintained remission. In the final model, greater recurrence risk was associated with female sex (hazard ratio [HR] = 1.536; confidence interval [CI] = 1.027-2.297), younger age of onset (HR = 0.990; CI = 0.981-0.999), higher perceived stress (HR = 1.121; CI = 1.022-1.229), disability (HR = 1.060; CI = 1.005-1.119), and less support with activities (HR = 0.885; CI = 0.812-0.963). Recurrence risk was also associated with higher Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) scores prior to censoring (HR = 1.081; CI = 1.033-1.131) and baseline symptoms of suicidal thoughts by MADRS (HR = 1.175; CI = 1.002-1.377) and sadness by Center for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression (HR = 1.302; CI, 1.080-1.569). Sex, age of onset, and suicidal thoughts were no longer associated with recurrence in a model incorporating report of multiple prior episodes (HR = 2.107; CI = 1.252-3.548). Neither neuropsychological test performance nor MRI measures of aging pathology were associated with recurrence.
Over half of the depressed elders who remitted experienced recurrence, mostly within 2 years. Multiple clinical and environmental measures predict recurrence risk. Work is needed to develop instruments that stratify risk.
老年期抑郁症(LLD)与脆弱的抗抑郁反应和高复发风险相关。本研究探讨了哪些措施可以预测缓解后的 LLD 复发。
年龄在 60 岁或以上,符合《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第四版(DSM-IV)重性抑郁障碍诊断标准的个体被纳入老年抑郁症的神经认知结果研究。参与者接受了手册化的抗抑郁治疗,并在平均 5 年的时间内进行了纵向随访。研究分析包括缓解的参与者。测量包括人口统计学和临床测量、医学合并症、残疾、生活压力、社会支持和神经心理学测试。一部分人接受了结构磁共振成像(MRI)检查。
在 241 名缓解的老年人中,大约在 4 年多的时间里,有 137 人(56.8%)复发,104 人(43.2%)保持缓解。在最终模型中,较高的复发风险与女性(危险比 [HR] = 1.536;置信区间 [CI] = 1.027-2.297)、较年轻的发病年龄(HR = 0.990;CI = 0.981-0.999)、较高的感知压力(HR = 1.121;CI = 1.022-1.229)、残疾(HR = 1.060;CI = 1.005-1.119)和较少的活动支持(HR = 0.885;CI = 0.812-0.963)相关。复发风险还与较高的蒙哥马利-阿斯伯格抑郁评定量表(MADRS)评分(HR = 1.081;CI = 1.033-1.131)和基线时 MADRS 自杀想法(HR = 1.175;CI = 1.002-1.377)和抑郁情绪的中心流行病学研究-抑郁量表(HR = 1.302;CI,1.080-1.569)评分相关。在纳入多次既往发作报告的模型中,性别、发病年龄和自杀想法与复发不再相关(HR = 2.107;CI = 1.252-3.548)。神经心理学测试表现或 MRI 老化病理测量均与复发无关。
超过一半的缓解后的抑郁老年人经历了复发,大多数在 2 年内复发。多种临床和环境因素可预测复发风险。需要开发能够分层风险的工具。