| Literature DB >> 21872216 |
Mika Kivimäki1, G David Batty, Markus Jokela, Klaus P Ebmeier, Jussi Vahtera, Marianna Virtanen, Eric J Brunner, Adam G Tabak, Daniel R Witte, Meena Kumari, Archana Singh-Manoux, Mark Hamer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Previous research suggests a link between antidepressant use and diabetes, but it is unclear whether the association is causal or attributable to detection/ascertainment bias. To examine this, we assessed the associations of antidepressant use with change in glucose levels and incidence of undiagnosed and diagnosed diabetes.Entities:
Mesh:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21872216 PMCID: PMC3202626 DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2011.07.008
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Biol Psychiatry ISSN: 0006-3223 Impact factor: 13.382
Figure 1Study flow diagram for diabetes analyses.
Baseline Characteristics of the Study Population by Antidepressant Medication Use, the Whitehall II Study (n = 5978)
| Baseline Characteristic | Never Users | Ever Users | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of Participants | Mean (SD) or % | Number of Participants | Mean (SD) or % | ||
| Mean Age, Years | 5559 | 49.2 (6.0) | 419 | 48.9 (5.8) | .24 |
| Sex, % Male | 5559 | 71.9 | 419 | 58.2 | <.0001 |
| Ethnicity, % White | 5559 | 91.8 | 419 | 94.5 | .051 |
| Occupational Position, % High | 5524 | 42.1 | 419 | 32.5 | .001 |
| Body Mass Index, kg/m2 | 5524 | 25.1 (3.5) | 418 | 25.1 (3.8) | .96 |
| Waist Circumference, cm | 5462 | 85.6 (11.3) | 414 | 84.2 (12.7) | .01 |
| Systolic Blood Pressure, mm Hg | 5527 | 119 (13) | 419 | 119 (13) | .06 |
| HDL Cholesterol, mmol/L | 5515 | 1.4 (.4) | 418 | 1.5 (.4) | .11 |
| Triglycerides, mmol/L | 5532 | 1.4 (1.1) | 419 | 1.4 (1.0) | .53 |
| Antihypertensive Medication, % | 5559 | 5.4 | 419 | 8.6 | .006 |
| Lipid-Lowering Medication, % | 5559 | .7 | 419 | .1 | .49 |
| Current Smoking, % | 5524 | 11.9 | 419 | 16.0 | .01 |
| Alcohol Consumption, Units per Week | 5520 | 10.6 (12.6) | 418 | 10.1 (12.9) | .39 |
| Sedentary Lifestyle, % | 5526 | 17.6 | 419 | 26.5 | <.0001 |
| Depressive Symptoms, % | 4503 | 12.5 | 340 | 37.7 | <.0001 |
HDL, high-density lipoprotein; SD, standard deviation.
Baseline refers to phase 3 (1991/1993) in the Whitehall II study. The numbers in characteristic slightly vary due to missing values.
Antidepressant use was assessed at phases 3, 5 (1997/1999), 7 (2003/2004), and 9 (2008/2009).
Based on Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale score >16 at phase 7.
Status of Antidepressant Use at Baseline and Incident Diabetes Mellitus at Follow-up by Method of Detectiona
| Number of Participants (Number of Diabetes Cases) | Odds Ratio | 95% Confidence Interval | ||
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antidepressant Use at Phase 3 | Outcome: Incident physician-diagnosed diabetes | |||
| No | 5884 (282) | 1.00 | ||
| Yes | 94 (12) | 3.10 | (1.66 to 5.78) | <.0001 |
| Antidepressant Use at Phase 3 | Outcome: Incident study screen-detected diabetes | |||
| No | 5884 (340) | 1.00 | ||
| Yes | 94 (6) | 1.24 | (.54 to 2.87) | .62 |
Baseline refers to phase 3 (1991/1993) in the Whitehall II study. Follow-up refers to phases 5 (1997/1999), 7 (2003/2004), and 9 (2008/2009). All participants were free of diabetes at baseline. Odds ratios for incident diabetes are adjusted for age, sex, and ethnicity.
Cross-Sectional Association Between Status of Antidepressant Use and Diabetes Mellitus by Method of Detectiona
| Phase Antidepressant Use | Number of Observations (Number of Diabetes Cases) | Odds Ratio (95% Confidence Interval) | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Phases 5 to 9 Combined | Outcome: Incident physician-diagnosed diabetes | ||
| No | 19,767 (274) | 1.00 | |
| Yes | 569 (20) | 2.34 (1.46, 3.75) | <.0001 |
| Phases 3 to 9 Combined | Outcome: Incident study screen-detected diabetes | ||
| No | 20,060 (337) | 1.00 | |
| Yes | 569 (9) | .88 (.45, 1.72) | .70 |
Odds ratios are from age-, sex-, and ethnicity-adjusted multilevel logistic regression pooling person-observations over study phases with generalized estimation equation. Diabetes is considered only at first occurrence and coded as missing value at subsequent phases.
The analysis is based on 5978 participants, of which 294 had incident physician-diagnosed diabetes and 346 incident screen-detected diabetes.
Figure 2Mean fasting plasma glucose (A) (n = 5487) and 2-hour postload plasma glucose (B) (n = 4991) by study phase and antidepressant use. Linear trends are adjusted for age, sex, and ethnicity.
Longitudinal Association Between Status of Antidepressant Use and Subsequent Change in Fasting and 2-Hour Postload Glucose Levels Among Participants Without Physician-Diagnosed Diabetes
| Data Cycles 1 to 3 Combined | Number of Observations | Mean (SD), mmol/L | Mean (95% CI) Difference, mmol/L | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Antidepressant Use | Outcome: Subsequent change in fasting glucose | |||
| No | 12,295 | .0 (.7) | .0 (Ref) | |
| Yes | 285 | .1 (.7) | .1 (−.0, .1) | .11 |
| Exposure to Antidepressant Use | ||||
| No | 12,197 | .0 (.7) | .0 (Ref) | |
| 1 examination | 300 | .1 (.7) | .1 (.0, .1) | .02 |
| 2 examinations | 65 | −.0 (.6) | −.0 (−.2, .1) | .58 |
| 3 examinations | 18 | −.0 (.6) | −.0 (−.3, .3) | .81 |
| Antidepressant Use | Outcome: Subsequent change in 2-hour postload glucose | |||
| No | 11,123 | .6 (1.9) | .0 (Ref) | |
| Yes | 234 | .5 (1.7) | −.0 (−.2, .2) | .87 |
| Exposure to Antidepressant Use | ||||
| No | 11,047 | .6 (1.9) | .0 (Ref) | |
| 1 examination | 250 | .6 (1.6) | −.0 (−.2, .2) | .93 |
| 2 examinations | 50 | .3 (1.8) | −.2 (−.7, .3) | .46 |
| 3 examinations | 10 | .6 (2.4) | .0 (−1.1, 1.1) | .98 |
Data cycle 1 is from phase 3 (1991/1993) to phase 5 (1997/1999); data cycle 2 from phase 5 (1997/1999) to phase 7 (2003/2004); and data cycle 3 from phase 7 (2003/2004) to phase 9 (2008/2009).
CI, confidence interval; Ref, reference group; SD, standard deviation.
Total number of participants 5487 in analysis of fasting glucose and 4991 in analysis of postload glucose.
From age-, sex-, and ethnicity-adjusted multilevel linear regression pooling person-observations over study phases with generalized estimation equation.