Johnson M E, Fisher D G, Fenaughty A, Theno S A
IVDU Project, Department of Psychology, University of Alaska Anchorage 99508, USA.
Am J Gastroenterol. 1998 May;93(5):785-9. doi: 10.1111/j.1572-0241.1998.225_a.x.
Clinical case studies have implicated depression as a possible side-effect of interferon treatment for the Hepatitis C virus (HCV). However, because these studies generally did not include a pretreatment assessment of depression, it cannot be definitively stated whether depression is a side-effect of interferon treatment, a syndrome coexisting with HCV, or a common characteristic of individuals who are vulnerable to HCV infection. To gather more information about this issue, self-reported depressive symptomatology of drug users with HCV who have not received interferon treatment was compared to that of uninfected drug users.
Subjects were 309 drug users not currently in substance abuse treatment who were participating in a National Institute on Drug Abuse project. Subjects completed the Center for Epidemiological Studies-Depression (CES-D) instrument and provided a blood sample for HCV testing.
Serological findings revealed that 52.4% of the subjects tested positive for HCV antibodies. Of the HCV-positive subjects, 57.2% had significant depressive symptomatology, whereas only 48.2% of the HCV-negative subjects did, for an overall rate of 52.6%. The two groups also differed on two specific dimensions of depression, with the HCV-positive group scoring lower on the Positive Affect scale and higher on the Somatic/Retarded Activity scale.
These findings reveal high levels of depressive symptomatology among drug users, as well as the possibility of a coexisting depressive syndrome with HCV infection. These findings raise the possibility that depression associated with interferon treatment may, at least partially, be accounted for by preexisting depression. Further research is needed to determine the nature and origins of depression in individuals in treatment with interferon for HCV with specific focus placed on determining the dimensions of depression associated with HCV infection and interferon treatment.
临床病例研究表明,抑郁症可能是丙型肝炎病毒(HCV)干扰素治疗的副作用。然而,由于这些研究通常未包括抑郁症的治疗前评估,因此无法确定抑郁症是干扰素治疗的副作用、与HCV共存的综合征,还是易感染HCV个体的共同特征。为了收集更多关于这个问题的信息,将未接受干扰素治疗的HCV感染吸毒者自我报告的抑郁症状与未感染吸毒者进行了比较。
研究对象为309名未接受药物滥用治疗且参与美国国立药物滥用研究所项目的吸毒者。研究对象完成了流行病学研究中心抑郁量表(CES-D),并提供血样进行HCV检测。
血清学检查结果显示,52.4%的研究对象HCV抗体检测呈阳性。在HCV阳性研究对象中,57.2%有明显的抑郁症状,而HCV阴性研究对象中只有48.2%有明显抑郁症状,总体比例为52.6%。两组在抑郁的两个特定维度上也存在差异,HCV阳性组在积极情感量表上得分较低,在躯体/迟缓活动量表上得分较高。
这些研究结果揭示了吸毒者中抑郁症状的高发率,以及HCV感染并存抑郁综合征的可能性。这些结果增加了一种可能性,即与干扰素治疗相关的抑郁症可能至少部分是由先前存在的抑郁症引起的。需要进一步研究以确定接受HCV干扰素治疗个体抑郁症的性质和根源,特别关注确定与HCV感染和干扰素治疗相关的抑郁症维度。