Literature DB >> 23945905

Association of depression with accelerated cognitive decline among patients with type 2 diabetes in the ACCORD-MIND trial.

Mark D Sullivan1, Wayne J Katon, Laura C Lovato, Michael E Miller, Anne M Murray, Karen R Horowitz, R Nick Bryan, Hertzel C Gerstein, Santica Marcovina, Basil E Akpunonu, Janice Johnson, Jean Francois Yale, Jeff Williamson, Lenore J Launer.   

Abstract

IMPORTANCE: Depression has been identified as a risk factor for dementia among patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus but the cognitive domains and patient groups most affected have not been identified.
OBJECTIVE: To determine whether comorbid depression in patients with type 2 diabetes accelerates cognitive decline.
DESIGN: A 40-month cohort study of participants in the Action to Control Cardiovascular Risk in Diabetes-Memory in Diabetes (ACCORD-MIND) trial.
SETTING: Fifty-two clinics organized into 6 clinical networks across the United States and Canada. PARTICIPANTS: Two thousand nine hundred seventy-seven participants with type 2 diabetes at high risk for cardiovascular events. INTERVENTION: The Digit Symbol Substitution Test, Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, and the modified Stroop test were used to assess cognition. The 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire was used to assess depression. MAIN OUTCOMES AND MEASURES: Mixed-effects statistical models were used to analyze cognitive test outcomes incorporating depression as a time-dependent covariate.
RESULTS: Participants with scores indicative of depression (9-item Patient Health Questionnaire, ≥10) showed greater cognitive decline during 40-month follow-up on all tests, with the following differences in estimated least squares means: Digit Symbol Substitution Test, 0.72 (95% CI, 0.25 to 1.19; P = .003), Rey Auditory Verbal Learning Test, 0.18 (95% CI, 0.07 to 0.29; P = .001), and Stroop interference, -1.06 (95% CI, -1.93 to -0.18; P = .02). This effect of depression on risk of cognitive decline did not differ according to previous cardiovascular disease; baseline cognition or age; or intensive vs standard glucose-lowering treatment, blood pressure treatment, lipid treatment, or insulin treatment. Addition of demographic and clinical covariates to models did not significantly change the cognitive decline associated with depression. CONCLUSIONS AND RELEVANCE: Depression in patients with type 2 diabetes was associated with greater cognitive decline in all domains, across all treatment arms, and in all participant subgroups assessed. Future randomized trials will be necessary to determine if depression treatment can lower the risk of cognitive decline in patients with diabetes.

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Year:  2013        PMID: 23945905      PMCID: PMC4212406          DOI: 10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2013.1965

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  JAMA Psychiatry        ISSN: 2168-622X            Impact factor:   21.596


  43 in total

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2.  Depressive symptoms predict incident cognitive impairment in cognitive healthy older women.

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3.  Depression in patients with coronary heart disease.

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4.  A meta-analysis of cytokines in major depression.

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6.  Effects of intensive glucose lowering in type 2 diabetes.

Authors:  Hertzel C Gerstein; Michael E Miller; Robert P Byington; David C Goff; J Thomas Bigger; John B Buse; William C Cushman; Saul Genuth; Faramarz Ismail-Beigi; Richard H Grimm; Jeffrey L Probstfield; Denise G Simons-Morton; William T Friedewald
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8.  Depressive symptoms, health behaviors, and risk of cardiovascular events in patients with coronary heart disease.

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Review 9.  Diabetes and the risk of multi-system aging phenotypes: a systematic review and meta-analysis.

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Authors:  Briana Mezuk; William W Eaton; Sandra Albrecht; Sherita Hill Golden
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  30 in total

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2.  Depression is not associated with diabetes control in minority elderly.

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4.  Association of subsyndromal and depressive symptoms with inflammatory markers among different ethnic groups: the multi-ethnic study of atherosclerosis (MESA).

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Review 5.  Psychological interventions for diabetes-related distress in adults with type 2 diabetes mellitus.

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Review 6.  Diabetes and cognition.

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Review 7.  Diabetes, Depression, and Cognition: a Recursive Cycle of Cognitive Dysfunction and Glycemic Dysregulation.

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Review 8.  A double-edged sword: review of the interplay between physical health and mental health.

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Review 9.  Alzheimer's disease and type 2 diabetes: multiple mechanisms contribute to interactions.

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