Department of Psychology, University of California, Berkeley, Berkeley, CA.
Department of Psychiatry, Zuckerberg San Francisco General Hospital, University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco, CA.
Nicotine Tob Res. 2021 Jan 22;23(2):267-275. doi: 10.1093/ntr/ntaa036.
We use multilevel modeling to parse out the effects of time-varying smoking abstinence and baseline depression (history and severity) on depression severity over 1 year.
Participants were 1000 smokers recruited worldwide for an online randomized controlled tobacco cessation trial. We examined whether changes in depression severity over time were associated with self-reported 7-day point prevalence smoking status assessed at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-month follow-up (FU) using baseline major depressive episode (MDE) history and baseline depression severity as time-invariant covariates. We present depression severity means and smoking abstinence at each FU.
Regardless of concurrent abstinence status, baseline MDE history was significantly related to depression severity over time: those reporting a past MDE had worse depressive symptoms over time compared with those reporting no MDE history. Baseline depression severity interacted significantly with time-varying abstinence status: for every 1-unit increase in baseline scores on the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D), individuals who were smoking at FU reported CES-D scores that were 0.17 points higher than those who were abstinent. In this context, nicotine dependence, gender, age, or marital status did not affect depression severity.
In the context of cessation, having an MDE history plays a significant role in the trajectory of depression severity over the course of 1 year, regardless of abstinence status. Abstinence is related to lower depressive symptoms at each FU, and this effect was stronger at higher levels of baseline depression severity.
This study indicates that depressive symptoms are not exacerbated among individuals who are quitting smoking at 1-, 3-, 6-, and 12-month FUs. Depression severity is worse with a baseline history of MDE. Further, those with high baseline depression severity who continue smoking have worse depressive symptoms throughout a 1-year period compared with their abstinent counterparts.
我们使用多层次建模来解析随时间变化的戒烟和基线抑郁(病史和严重程度)对 1 年内抑郁严重程度的影响。
参与者是全球范围内招募的 1000 名吸烟者,他们参加了一项在线随机对照戒烟试验。我们检查了随着时间的推移,抑郁严重程度的变化是否与在 1、3、6 和 12 个月随访(FU)时自我报告的 7 天点流行吸烟状况有关,这些随访使用基线重性抑郁发作(MDE)病史和基线抑郁严重程度作为时间不变的协变量。我们在每个 FU 时呈现抑郁严重程度平均值和戒烟情况。
无论同时的戒烟状况如何,基线 MDE 病史与随时间的抑郁严重程度显著相关:报告有过去 MDE 的人随着时间的推移抑郁症状更严重,而报告没有 MDE 病史的人则相反。基线抑郁严重程度与随时间变化的戒烟状况显著交互作用:对于中心流行病学研究抑郁量表(CES-D)基线评分每增加 1 个单位,在 FU 时吸烟的个体报告的 CES-D 评分比不吸烟的个体高 0.17 分。在这种情况下,尼古丁依赖、性别、年龄或婚姻状况并不影响抑郁严重程度。
在戒烟的背景下,无论戒烟状况如何,过去有 MDE 病史在 1 年内抑郁严重程度的轨迹中起着重要作用。戒烟与每个 FU 时更低的抑郁症状有关,而且这种影响在基线抑郁严重程度较高时更强。
这项研究表明,在 1、3、6 和 12 个月 FU 时,戒烟的个体的抑郁症状并没有恶化。基线有 MDE 病史的抑郁严重程度更差。此外,与那些持续吸烟的基线抑郁严重程度较高的个体相比,他们在 1 年内的抑郁症状更严重。