| Literature DB >> 26159935 |
Haya Ascher-Svanum1, Anthony Zagar2, Dingfeng Jiang2, Dara Schuster2, Henry Schmitt3, Ellen B Dennehy2,4, David M Kendall2, Joel Raskin2, Robert J Heine5.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Although depression is often associated with poor glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), this observation has been inconsistent. This exploratory, post hoc analysis investigated associations between depression parameters and glycemic control using data from a 24-month, prospective, observational, non-interventional study evaluating glycemic response following insulin initiation for T2DM.Entities:
Keywords: Depressed mood; Depression; Diabetes distress; Glycemic control; Insulin therapy
Year: 2015 PMID: 26159935 PMCID: PMC4575299 DOI: 10.1007/s13300-015-0118-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Diabetes Ther Impact factor: 2.945
Baseline patient characteristics
| Overall population | Depressed mood | Diabetes distress | History of depression diagnosis | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
|
| Not depressed | Depressed | Low distress | High distress | No | Yes | |
| Overall score (SD) | 0.56 (0.61) | 28.95 (18.59) | NA | ||||
| Percentage depressed | 49.9% | NA | 12.4% | ||||
| HbA1c (%), mean (SD) | 9.55 (2.02) | 9.48 (2.03) | 9.62 (2.02) | 9.39 (1.97) | 9.91 (2.09)*** | 9.36 (1.89) | 10.77 (2.37)*** |
| Age, mean (SD) | 60.39 (10.83) | 60.40 (10.93) | 60.34 (10.76) | 61.12 (10.82) | 58.66 (10.76)** | 60.66 (10.87) | 58.56 (10.44)* |
| Male, | 468 (52.8) | 280 (63.2) | 186 (42.3)*** | 348 (56.3) | 116 (44.4)** | 430 (55.8) | 38 (32.8)*** |
| BMI (kg/m2), mean (SD) | 29.67 (5.20) | 29.32 (5.09) | 30.06 (5.27)* | 29.34 (5.12) | 30.51 (5.30)** | 29.46 (5.18) | 31.11 (5.10)** |
| Minimum mandatory level of education, | 549 (64.4) | 258 (61.3) | 289 (67.5) | 365 (62.0) | 179 (69.9)* | 480 (64.9) | 69 (61.6) |
| Duration of diabetes (years), mean (SD) | 9.96 (7.01) | 9.22 (6.41) | 10.67 (7.45)** | 9.76 (7.20) | 10.46 (6.42) | 9.91 (7.21) | 10.25 (5.45) |
| Presence of macrovascular complications, | 278 (31.4) | 126 (28.4) | 151 (34.3) | 188 (30.4) | 89 (34.1) | 242 (31.4) | 36 (31.0) |
| Presence of microvascular complications, | 334 (37.7) | 144 (32.5) | 190 (43.2)** | 204 (33.0) | 129 (49.4)*** | 257 (33.4) | 77 (66.4)*** |
| Insulin type, | |||||||
| Long/intermediate | 444 (50.1) | 213 (48.1) | 229 (52.0) | 319 (51.6) | 121 (46.4) | 389 (50.5) | 55 (47.4) |
| Mixture | 348 (39.3) | 184 (41.5) | 163 (37.0) | 235 (38.0) | 110 (42.1) | 301 (39.1) | 47 (40.5) |
| Basal/bolus | 69 (7.8) | 33 (7.4) | 36 (8.2) | 44 (7.1) | 25 (9.6) | 57 (7.4) | 12 (10.3) |
| Short-acting insulin | 25 (2.8) | 13 (2.9) | 12 (2.7) | 20 (3.2) | 5 (1.9) | 23 (3.0) | 2 (1.7) |
n (%) is calculated based on data for each variable within each depression parameter. Therefore, n may not total to column N. The % is actual percentage within each variable
BMI body mass index, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin, NA not applicable, SD standard deviation
* Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.05
** Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.01
*** Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.001
Fig. 1a Decline over time in proportion of patients with depressed mood [p < 0.001 for linear trend test by Generalized Estimating Equation (GEE)]. b No significant change over time (p = 0.098 for linear trend test by GEE) in proportion of patients with high diabetes distress
Fig. 2a Mean HbA1c over 24 months by history of diagnosed depression at baseline. Presented results are from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed a similar pattern as the unadjusted analysis. Group differences were, however, no longer statistically significant at 6 months and became significant in the opposite direction at 18 and 24 months. b Mean HbA1c over 24 months by depressed mood. Presented results are from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed the same pattern as the unadjusted analysis. Group differences were, however, no longer statistically significant at 3 and 6 months. c Mean HbA1c over 24 months by diabetes distress. High diabetes distress is defined as a score ≥75th percentile on the DHP-18 Psychological Distress domain score at each assessment. Results are presented from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed the same pattern as the unadjusted analysis. Group differences were, however, no longer statistically significant at baseline. DHP-18 Psychological Distress domain of the Diabetes Health Profile, HbA1c glycated hemoglobin. *Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.05. **Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.01. ***Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.001. ∆ = Difference between groups
Correlations between the depression parameters at baseline
| Depression/distress parameter | Correlation coefficient ( |
|---|---|
| Depressed mood and history of diagnosed depression | 0.194 ( |
| Depressed mood and diabetes distress | 0.396 ( |
| Diabetes distress and history of diagnosed depression | 0.137 ( |
aSpearman correlation
bPearson correlation
Fig. 3a Depressed mood scores over 24 months by history of depression diagnosis at baseline. Results are presented from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed the same pattern as the unadjusted analysis. Group differences were, however, no longer statistically significant at 12 months. b Diabetes distress scores over 24 months by history of depression diagnosis at baseline. Results are presented from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed the same pattern as the unadjusted analysis. Group differences were, however, no longer statistically significant at baseline. c Depressed mood scores over 24 months by diabetes distress. Results are presented from the unadjusted analysis. Results from the adjusted analysis showed the same pattern as the unadjusted analysis. *Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.05. **Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.01. ***Significant difference between the groups with vs. without the depression parameter at p ≤ 0.001. ∆ = Difference between groups