Central Research Institute of Ambulatory Health Care in Germany (Zi), Berlin, Germany.
Department of Epidemiology and Health Monitoring, Unit 26 Mental Health, Robert Koch Institute, Berlin, Germany.
BMC Psychiatry. 2020 Mar 30;20(1):142. doi: 10.1186/s12888-020-02546-8.
Depression is frequently accompanied by other mental disorders and various somatic diseases; however, previous comorbidity studies often relied on self-reported data and have not simultaneously assessed the entire spectrum of mental and somatic diagnoses. The aim is to provide a complete picture of mental and somatic comorbidity of depression in routine outpatient care in a high income country with a relatively well equipped health care system.
Using ambulatory claims data covering 87% of the German population (age 15+), we designed a cross-sectional study by identifying persons diagnosed with mild, moderate and severe depression in 2017 (N = 6.3 million) and a control group matched 4:1 on sex, 5-year age group and region of residence (N = 25.2 million). Stratified by severity, we calculated the prevalence of 202 diagnosis groups included in the ICD-10 in persons with depression as compared to matched controls using prevalence ratios (PR).
Nearly all mental disorders were at least twice as prevalent in persons with depression relative to controls, showing a dose-response relationship with depression severity. Irrespective of severity, the three most prevalent somatic comorbid diagnosis groups were 'other dorsopathies' (M50-M54), 'hypertensive diseases' (I10-I15) and 'metabolic disorders' (E70-E90), exhibiting PRs in moderate depression of 1.56, 1.23 and 1.33, respectively. Strong associations were revealed with diseases of the central nervous system (i.e. multiple sclerosis) and several neurological diseases, among them sleep disorders, migraine and epilepsy, most of them exhibiting at least 2- to 3-fold higher prevalences in depression relative to controls. Utilization of health care was higher among depression cases compared to controls.
The present study based on data from nearly the complete adolescent and adult population in Germany comprehensively illustrates the comorbidity status of persons diagnosed with depression as coded in routine health care. Our study should contribute to increasing the awareness of the strong interconnection of depression with all other mental and the vast majority of somatic diseases. Our findings underscore clinical and health-economic relevance and the necessity of systematically addressing the high comorbidity of depression and somatic as well as other mental diseases through prevention, early identification and adequate management of depressive symptoms.
抑郁症常伴有其他精神障碍和各种躯体疾病;然而,既往的合并症研究往往依赖于自我报告数据,并未同时评估整个精神和躯体诊断谱系。本研究旨在提供在高收入国家(拥有相对完善的医疗保健系统)的常规门诊环境下,抑郁症患者的精神和躯体合并症的全貌。
我们使用覆盖德国 87%人口(年龄 15 岁以上)的门诊索赔数据,通过在 2017 年识别出患有轻度、中度和重度抑郁症的患者(N=630 万)和按性别、5 岁年龄组和居住地区以 4:1 比例匹配的对照组(N=2520 万)设计了一项横断面研究。按严重程度分层,我们使用患病率比(PR)计算了与对照组相比,在患有抑郁症的人群中 202 个 ICD-10 诊断组的患病率。
几乎所有的精神障碍在抑郁症患者中的患病率都至少是对照组的两倍,且与抑郁症严重程度呈剂量反应关系。无论严重程度如何,最常见的三种躯体合并症诊断组是“其他背疼”(M50-M54)、“高血压疾病”(I10-I15)和“代谢紊乱”(E70-E90),中度抑郁症的 PR 分别为 1.56、1.23 和 1.33。与中枢神经系统疾病(如多发性硬化症)和几种神经系统疾病之间存在强烈关联,其中睡眠障碍、偏头痛和癫痫的患病率至少比对照组高 2-3 倍。与对照组相比,抑郁症患者的医疗保健利用率更高。
本研究基于德国近全部青少年和成年人口的数据,全面说明了在常规医疗保健中诊断为抑郁症的患者的合并症状况。我们的研究应有助于提高对抑郁症与所有其他精神障碍和绝大多数躯体疾病之间的强关联的认识。我们的研究结果强调了临床和健康经济学的相关性,以及通过预防、早期识别和充分管理抑郁症状,系统地解决抑郁和躯体以及其他精神疾病的高合并症的必要性。