Zhang Wen, Tang Yi, Chen Lei, Zhang Zhongyi, Hu Xinyu, Cheng Kai, Zhou Jiaju, Tong Peijian
The First Affiliated Hospital of Zhejiang Chinese Medical University, Zhejiang Provincial Hospital of Chinese Medicine, Hangzhou, China.
Geriatr Orthop Surg Rehabil. 2025 Jun 30;16:21514593251357525. doi: 10.1177/21514593251357525. eCollection 2025.
BACKGROUND & AIMS: Depression and osteoporosis are common among middle-aged and older adults, both impacting morbidity and quality of life. Their shared risk factors suggest a potential link, but this relationship remains underexplored. This study aimed to assess the association between depressive symptoms and osteoporosis in two large cohorts: the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES, 2005-2010) and Health and Retirement Study (HRS, 2012).
We analyzed data from adults aged ≥50 years in NHANES (n = 3612) and HRS (n = 4307). Depressive symptoms were measured using PHQ-9 in NHANES and CES-D 8 in HRS, while osteoporosis was defined by self-reported diagnosis and medication use. Generalized linear models were used to evaluate the association, adjusting for demographic, lifestyle, and comorbidity factors. Subgroup analyses and sensitivity tests were conducted to explore effect modifiers and result robustness.
Depressive symptoms were positively associated with osteoporosis in both cohorts (NHANES: adjusted OR = 1.061, 95% CI: 1.034-1.088; HRS: adjusted OR = 1.063, 95% CI: 1.014-1.115). Significant associations were observed across subgroups, with stronger effects in individuals with diabetes and arthritis. Sex differences showed higher odds ratios for men in HRS. The relationship exhibited a linear trend, with increasing risk as depressive severity intensified.
Depressive symptoms (PHQ-9/CES-D8) significantly associate with higher osteoporosis risk in older adults, with consistent cross-sectional findings across populations. While causality remains unclear, results support clinical bone density monitoring in depression care and depression screening in osteoporosis management. Future longitudinal studies should clarify mechanisms, while public health strategies should integrate mental-bone health prevention approaches.
抑郁和骨质疏松在中老年人群中较为常见,二者均会影响发病率和生活质量。它们共同的风险因素提示了一种潜在联系,但这种关系仍未得到充分研究。本研究旨在评估两个大型队列中抑郁症状与骨质疏松之间的关联:美国国家健康与营养检查调查(NHANES,2005 - 2010年)和健康与退休研究(HRS,2012年)。
我们分析了NHANES(n = 3612)和HRS(n = 4307)中年龄≥50岁成年人的数据。在NHANES中使用PHQ - 9测量抑郁症状,在HRS中使用CES - D 8测量,而骨质疏松通过自我报告的诊断和药物使用来定义。使用广义线性模型评估关联,并对人口统计学、生活方式和合并症因素进行调整。进行亚组分析和敏感性测试以探索效应修饰因素和结果的稳健性。
在两个队列中,抑郁症状均与骨质疏松呈正相关(NHANES:调整后的OR = 1.061,95%CI:1.034 - 1.088;HRS:调整后的OR = 1.063,95%CI:1.014 - 1.115)。在各亚组中均观察到显著关联,在患有糖尿病和关节炎的个体中效应更强。性别差异显示HRS中男性的优势比更高。这种关系呈现出线性趋势,随着抑郁严重程度的加剧风险增加。
抑郁症状(PHQ - 9/CES - D8)与老年人骨质疏松风险升高显著相关,在不同人群中的横断面研究结果一致。虽然因果关系尚不清楚,但结果支持在抑郁症护理中进行临床骨密度监测以及在骨质疏松症管理中进行抑郁症筛查。未来的纵向研究应阐明机制,而公共卫生策略应整合精神 - 骨骼健康预防方法。