Aparicio-Castro E, Candeliere-Merlicco A, María Santa C, Villaverde-González R
Hospital Clínico Universitario Virgen de la Arrixaca, Murcia, España.
Hospital General Universitario Rafael Méndez, 30800 Lorca, España.
Rev Neurol. 2024 Jun 1;78(11):317-322. doi: 10.33588/rn.7811.2024092.
Depression is one of the most prevalent psychiatric conditions in adulthood, reaching figures of around 20%. The methodologies used to study depression are varied, and range from a self-administered test to structured psychiatric assessment. Several studies of patients with multiple sclerosis (MS) have been conducted in the last 20 years, and figures of around 35% have been found for depressive symptoms, while depressive disorders are less frequent, at approximately 21%.
The aim of this study is to evaluate the usefulness of patient self-reported scales such as the Beck depression inventory (BDI) for identifying depressive symptoms in patients with MS, and to analyse their correlation with the diagnosis of clinical depression or depressive disorder using the psychiatric clinical interview based on the criteria of the Diagnostic and statistical manual of mental disorders, fifth edition.
This is a multicentre descriptive cross-sectional study of patients with MS and depressive symptoms. The BDI and the Hamilton depression rating scale (HDRS) were used, and the patients with the highest scores underwent psychiatric assessment.
A total of 191 patients were included; 81 of these (40.5%) had depressive symptomatology in the pathological range according to the BDI (cut-off point of 14), and 20 had a severe score (above 28). Nineteen patients with severe depressive symptoms according to both scales were selected and finally evaluated by a psychiatrist, who also assessed five patients who according to the neurologist had severe depressive symptoms despite a BDI score of almost 28, but did not reach that level. The suspected major depressive disorder was confirmed in only four (21%) cases with BDI scores indicative of severe symptoms. There is no correlation between the severity score as evidenced by the BDI and the psychiatric assessment. A major depressive disorder was diagnosed in 16 (66.6%) of the 24 patients with BDI > 26 evaluated by psychiatry. A score above 26 on the BDI enables identification of 75% of cases of depressive disorder without subtyping. The correlation between the HDRS and the BDI was statistically significant (r = 0.8; p < 0).
The BDI is a useful screening test for identifying patients with depressive symptoms; in specific terms, a score above 26 is probably indicative of a depressive disorder that may benefit from psychiatric assessment.
抑郁症是成年期最常见的精神疾病之一,发病率约为20%。研究抑郁症的方法多种多样,从自我管理测试到结构化精神评估。在过去20年里,已经对多发性硬化症(MS)患者进行了多项研究,发现抑郁症状的发生率约为35%,而抑郁症的发生率较低,约为21%。
本研究的目的是评估患者自我报告量表(如贝克抑郁量表(BDI))在识别MS患者抑郁症状方面的有用性,并根据《精神疾病诊断与统计手册》第五版的标准,分析其与临床抑郁症或抑郁障碍诊断的相关性。
这是一项对MS和抑郁症状患者的多中心描述性横断面研究。使用了BDI和汉密尔顿抑郁评定量表(HDRS),对得分最高的患者进行了精神评估。
共纳入191例患者;其中81例(40.5%)根据BDI(临界值为14)在病理范围内有抑郁症状,20例得分严重(高于28)。选择了19例根据两个量表都有严重抑郁症状的患者,最后由精神科医生进行评估,精神科医生还评估了5例根据神经科医生判断有严重抑郁症状但BDI得分几乎为28但未达到该水平的患者。在BDI得分表明有严重症状的病例中,仅4例(21%)确诊为疑似重度抑郁症。BDI所显示的严重程度评分与精神评估之间没有相关性。在精神科评估的24例BDI>26的患者中,16例(66.6%)被诊断为重度抑郁症。BDI得分高于26可识别75%的未分型抑郁障碍病例。HDRS与BDI之间的相关性具有统计学意义(r = 0.8;p < 0)。
BDI是识别抑郁症状患者的有用筛查测试;具体而言,得分高于26可能表明患有抑郁症,可能需要精神评估。