Biosciences Department, Institute of Health and Society, Federal University of São Paulo, Campus Baixada Santista - UNIFESP/BS, Santos, São Paulo, 1015-020, Brazil.
Arch Womens Ment Health. 2021 Dec;24(6):851-866. doi: 10.1007/s00737-021-01123-6. Epub 2021 Apr 20.
This study aimed to systematically review the relationship of obesity-depression in the female sex. We carried out a systematic search (PubMed, MEDLINE, Embase) to quantify the articles (controlled trials and randomized controlled trials) regarding obesity and depression on a female population or a mixed sample. Successively, we established whether the sex specificities were studied by the authors and if they reported on collecting data regarding factors that may contribute to the evolution of obesity and depression and that could be responsible for the greater susceptibility of females to those conditions. After applying the inclusion and exclusion criteria, we found a total of 20 articles with a female sample and 54 articles with a mixed sample. More than half of all articles (51.35%, n = 38) evaluated the relationship between depression and obesity, but only 20 (27.03%) evaluated this relationship among females; still, 80% of those (n = 16) presented supporting results. However, few articles considered confounding factors related to female hormones (12.16%, n = 9) and none of the articles focused on factors responsible for the binomial obesity-depression in the female sex. The resulting articles also supported that depression (and related impairments) influencing obesity (and related impairments) is a two-way road. This systematic review supports the concurrency of obesity-depression in females but also shows how sex specificities are ultimately under-investigated. Female sex specificity is not being actively considered when studying the binomial obesity-depression, even within a female sample. Future studies should focus on trying to understand how the female sex and normal hormonal variations influence these conditions.
本研究旨在系统地回顾女性肥胖与抑郁的关系。我们进行了系统的检索(PubMed、MEDLINE、Embase),以量化关于女性人群或混合样本中肥胖和抑郁的文章(对照试验和随机对照试验)。随后,我们确定了作者是否研究了性别特异性,并报告了是否收集了可能导致肥胖和抑郁演变的因素的数据,以及这些因素是否可能导致女性更容易患上这些疾病。在应用纳入和排除标准后,我们共找到了 20 篇女性样本的文章和 54 篇混合样本的文章。超过一半的文章(51.35%,n=38)评估了抑郁与肥胖之间的关系,但只有 20 篇(27.03%)评估了女性之间的这种关系;尽管如此,其中 80%(n=16)的文章提出了支持性的结果。然而,很少有文章考虑与女性激素相关的混杂因素(12.16%,n=9),也没有文章关注导致女性肥胖-抑郁二项式的因素。由此产生的文章也支持抑郁(和相关障碍)影响肥胖(和相关障碍)是一个双向的过程。这项系统综述支持女性肥胖和抑郁的并发,但也表明性别特异性最终研究不足。在研究肥胖-抑郁二项式时,并没有积极考虑女性的性别特异性,即使在女性样本中也是如此。未来的研究应侧重于尝试了解女性性别和正常激素变化如何影响这些疾病。