| Literature DB >> 24278183 |
Mareike Hofmann1, Birgit Köhler, Falk Leichsenring, Johannes Kruse.
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To quantify the impact of depression measured by self-reports and depression measured by clinical interview on all-cause mortality in individuals with diabetes and to analyze the strength of both associations, the influence of covariates, and possible differences between studies assessing self-rated depressive symptoms and those using a clinical interview to measure depression as predictors of mortality. RESEARCH DESIGN AND METHODS: PUBMED and PsycINFO were searched up to July 2013 for prospective studies assessing depression, diabetes and mortality. The pooled hazard ratios were calculated using random-effects models.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24278183 PMCID: PMC3836777 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0079809
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Characteristics of studies in the meta-analysis in alphabetical order.
| Authors, year, country | Number of participants (mean age, sex, type of diabetes) | Number of participants with depression (%) | Definition and assessment of depression, depressive symptoms vs. clinical depression | Selected estimate (95% CI) | Adjustment variables | Follow-up (years) |
| Ahola et al. | 4,174 (39 years, 49% female, type 1) | 313 (8%) | Purchase of antidepressant agents within 1 year prior to baseline (depressive symptoms) | a. 1.65 (1.12–2.42), 2.00 (1.34–3.00); b. 1.12 (0.71–1.77), 2.15 (1.34–3.45) | a. age, diabetes duration; b. age, diabetes duration, diastolic blood pressure, smoking, HbA1c, nephropathy | 9 |
| Black et al. | 636 (≥65 years, 59% female for total sample, type 2) | 188 (30%) | Baseline-measurement: Center of Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D), cut-off ≥16 (depressive symptoms); assessment at the second wave (first follow-up interview): Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) (clinical depression) | depressive symptoms: 4.94 (3.30–7.38); clinical depression: 4.59 (2.12–9.93) | sex, age, education, acculturation, marital status | 7 |
| Bot et al. | 330 (65 years, 30% female, type not specified) | 106 (32%) | Beck Depression Inventory score), cut-off ≥10 depressive symptoms) | a. 3.79 (2.71–5.29); b. 2.90 (2.07–4.07) | a. age, sex, smoking, hypertension; b. age, sex, smoking, hypertension, previous MI, Killip class, left ventricular ejection fraction | 6.2 |
| Bruce et al. | 1,273 (64 years, 51% female, type 2) | 401 (32%) | General Health Status Questionnaire (GHS) (depressive symptoms) | 1.21 (0.95–1.55) | age, gender, diabetes duration, HbA1c, BP lowering therapy, BMI, smoking, exercise, indigenous Australian, CHD, CVD, Ln(ACR), retinopathy, neuropathy | 7–8 |
| Egede et al. | 715 (63 years, 62% female, type not specified) | 262 (37%) | Center of Epidemiological Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D), cut-off ≥16 (depressive symptoms) | a. 3.27 (2.66–4.01); b. 2.50 (2.04–3.08) | a. age, sex, race/ethnicity, income ratio, education, marital status; b. smoking, physical activity, BMI, aspirin use, comorbid conditions (cancer, hypertension, heart disease, stroke) | 8 |
| Iversen et al. | 1,494 (66 years, 50% female, type 1 and type 2) | 258 (17%) | Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale-D (HADS-D), cut-off ≥8, (depressive symptoms) | a. 1.37 (1.10–1.72); b. 1.35 (1.08–1.69) | a. age, male sex, education, smoking, waist circumference; b. microalbuminuria, HbA1c, insulin use | 10 |
| Katon et al. | 10,704 (76 years, 44% female, type not specified) | 1,657 (15%) | ICD-9 depression codes from medicare claims data (clinical depression) | 1.36 (1.16–1.59) | age, gender, race/ethnicity, Charlson score, prior CVA, CVD, or CVD procedure or amputation | 2 |
| Lin et al. | 4,184 (64 years, 49% female, type 2) | 850 (20%) | Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), minor vs. major depression (depressive symptoms) | a. 2.26 (1.79–2.85); b. 1.52 (1.19–1.95) | a. demographic characteristics; b. demographic, clinical characteristics, health habits and disease control measures | 5 |
| Pan et al. | 4,873 (67 years, 100% female, type 2) | 1,000 (21%) | Mental Health Index (MHI-5), cut-off = 52 and/or physician-diagnosed depression and/or antidepressant medication (depressive symptoms) | 1.90 (1.63–2.21) = RR | age, family history of diabetes and cancer, parental history of MI, marital status, ethnicity, BMI, physical activity, alcohol consumption, smoking, multivitamin use, estrogen hormone use, aspirin use, hypertension, hypercholesterolemia, heart disease, stroke, cancer | 6 |
| Pieper et al. | 1,141 (66 years, 52% female, type 2) | 165 (14%) | Depression Screening Questionnaire (DSQ), cut-off = 8 (depressive symptoms) | a. 2.49 (1.45–4.28); b. 2.14 (1.06–5.37) | a. age, sex; b. age, sex, waist circumference, school years, education, smoking, physical activity, malnutrition, triglycerides, HDL, hypertension, compliance | 3.5 |
| Richardson et al. | 14,500 (59 years, 0% female type 2) | 806 (6%) | ICD-9 codes (clinical depression) | 1.60 (1.3–1.8) | age, ethnicity, marital status, employment status, CHD, hypertension, stroke, cancer | 10 |
| Rosenthal et al. | 135 (70 years, 4% female, type not specified) | 45 (33%) | Yesavage Depression Inventory; Geriatric Depression Scale (GDS), cut-off = 10 (depressive symptoms) | 4.50 (1.47–13.82) OR converted to RR | - | 3 |
| Scherrer et al. | 53,632 (56 years, 12% female for total sample, type 2) | 12,679 (24%) | ICD-9-CM codes (clinical depression) | 1.06 (0.96, 1.17) OR converted to RR | - | 7 |
| Sullivan et al. | 2,053 (62 years, 40% female, type 2) | 624 (31%) | Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9), cut-off ≥10, probable major depression, probable minor depression, and continuous PHQ-9 score (depressive symptoms) | 1.76 (1.12–2.78) | age, sex, race/ethnicity, primary/secondary CVD prevention, HbA1c, lipids, blood pressure, BMI, smoking, alcohol consumption, living alone, blood pressure, presence of microvascular complications, CHF, education, duration of diabetes, antidepressant medications, glucose, blood pressure and lipid medications, assignment to one of eight study intervention arms | 4.7 |
| Ting et al. | 7,835 (57 years, 53% female, type 2) | 153 (2%) | ICD-9 codes by psychiatrists and usage of psychotropic drug at enrolment to the Registry (clinical depression) | 0.96 (0.55–1.66) | age, sex, smoking, duration of diabetes, BMI, systolic and diastolic blood pressure, HbA1c, lipids (LDL-cholesterol, HDL cholesterol, triglycerides) | 7.4 |
| Winkley et al. | 253 (62 years, 36% female, type 1 and type 2 [83%]) | 82 (32%) | Schedules for Clinical Assessment in Neuropsychiatry (SCAN) 2.1/DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual 4th edition) criteria for (clinical depression) | 2.09 (1.34–3.25) | age, sex, marital status, socioeconomic status, smoking, mean HbA1c, diabetes complications, ulcer severity | 5 |
Figure 1Flow of study selection.
Figure 2Forest plots of studies included in meta-analysis of all-cause mortality associated with depressive symptoms in individuals with diabetes.
Figure 3Forest plot of studies included in meta-analysis of all-cause mortality associated with clinical depression in individuals with diabetes.