| Literature DB >> 30834985 |
Olga Eyre1, Lucy Riglin2, Ellen Leibenluft3, Argyris Stringaris3, Stephan Collishaw2, Anita Thapar2.
Abstract
Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) and depression commonly co-occur. Identifying children with ADHD at risk for later depression may allow early intervention and prevention. Irritability is one possible mechanism linking these two disorders. It is common in ADHD and associated with later depression in the general population. Cross-sectional studies suggest an association between irritability and depression in ADHD, but longitudinal research is limited. This study followed up a clinical ADHD sample longitudinally to examine: (1) the association between childhood irritability and later depression symptoms, and (2) whether irritability persistence is important in this association. At baseline, parents (n = 696) completed semi-structured interviews about their child (mean age = 10.9), providing information on child psychopathology, including irritability. A subsample (n = 249) was followed up after a mean of 5.4 years. Parent-completed Mood and Feelings Questionnaires provided information on depressive symptoms at follow-up. Parent-rated structured diagnostic interviews provided information on ADHD diagnosis and irritability at follow-up. Regression analyses examined associations between (i) baseline irritability and depression symptoms at follow-up, and (ii) persistent (vs. remitted) irritability and depression symptoms at follow-up. Analyses controlled for age, gender, depression symptoms, anxiety, ADHD symptoms, and ADHD medication at baseline. Baseline irritability was associated with depression symptoms at follow-up, but the association attenuated after controlling for anxiety and ADHD symptoms. Persistent irritability was associated with depression symptoms at follow-up, after including all covariates. Children with ADHD with persistent irritability are at elevated risk of developing depression symptoms. They may be a target for early intervention and prevention of depression.Entities:
Keywords: ADHD; DMDD; Depression; Irritability
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30834985 PMCID: PMC6785584 DOI: 10.1007/s00787-019-01303-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Eur Child Adolesc Psychiatry ISSN: 1018-8827 Impact factor: 4.785
Fig. 1Flowchart showing numbers completing follow-up questionnaires and interviews
Baseline characteristics of (i) those taking part at baseline, (ii) those invited to follow-up, (iii) those completing follow-up questionnaires and (iv) those completing follow-up interviews
| (i) SAGE sample ( | (ii) Invited to follow-up ( | (iii) Follow-up: questionnaire ( | (iv) Follow-up: interview ( | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Gender, % male ( | 84% (583) | 82% (358) | 82% (204) | 80% (99) |
| Age, in years (range, SD) | 10.9 (6–18, SD = 2.99) | 9.2 (6–12, SD = 1.95) | 9.0 (6–12, SD = 1.90) | 8.5 (6–12, SD = 1.80) |
| IQ (range, SD) | 83 (41–119, SD 13.4) | 84 (46–119, SD = 12.4) | 85 (50–119, SD = 12.5) | 84 (58–118, SD = 12.0) |
| Income, % < £20,000/year ( | 63% (358) | 66% (239) | 62% (133) | 68% (74) |
| ADHD medication, % ( | 80.6% (554) | 77.3% (333) | 77.9% (194) | 79.0% (98) |
| Irritability score, mean (range, SD) | 2.19 (0–3, SD = 1.0) | 2.24 (0–3, SD = 0.95) | 2.22 (0–3, SD = 0.94) | 2.38 (0–3, SD = 0.79) |
| DMDD diagnosis, % ( | 31% (207) | 37.2% (152) | 39.2% (93) | 45.8% (55) |
| Anxiety disorder % ( | 6.1% (40) | 7.3% (30) | 7.9% (19) | 10.7% (13) |
| MDD diagnosis, % ( | 1.9% (13) | 1.4% (6) | 1.6% (4) | 0.8% (1) |
ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, DMDD disruptive mood dysregulation disorder, MDD major depressive disorder, Anxiety disorder includes generalised anxiety disorder or separation anxiety disorder, DMDD anxiety disorder and MDD diagnoses made using the CAPA, based on DSM-5 diagnostic criteria
aNumber available for each variable ranged from 565 to 696
bNumber available for each variable ranged from 364 to 434
cNumber available for each variable ranged from 214 to 249
dNumber available for each variable ranged from 109 to 124
Characteristics of respondents at follow-up
| Follow-up: questionnaires ( | Follow-up: interviews ( | |
|---|---|---|
| Gender, % male ( | 82% (204) | 81% (99) |
| Age, in years (range, SD) | 14.4 (8–19, SD = 2.38) | 14.7 (11–20, SD = 2.10) |
| ADHD medication, % ( | 69.6% (126) | 69.8% (81) |
| MFQ total score (range, SD) | 24.4 (0–68, SD = 15.4) | 23.7 (0–68, SD = 15.13) |
| ADHD diagnosis, % ( | – | 66.7% (82) |
| Irritability score (range, SD) | – | 1.46 (0–3, SD = 1.29) |
| DMDD diagnosis, % ( | – | 22.6% (26) |
| MDD diagnosis, % ( | – | 4.9% (6) |
| Anxiety disorder, % ( | – | 22.8% (25) |
ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, DMDD disruptive mood dysregulation disorder, MDD major depressive disorder, Anxiety disorder generalised anxiety disorder or separation anxiety disorder
aNumber available for each variable ranged from 181 to 249
bNumber available for each variable ranged from 113 to 124
Association between irritability score at baseline and parent-rated total MFQ score at follow-up
| Outcome: MFQ total (T2) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (standardised) | |||
| Model 1: irritable score (T1): unadjusted | 3.28 (1.25, 5.32) | 0.21 | 0.002 |
| Model 2: irritable score (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms | 2.20 (0.16, 4.25) | 0.14 | 0.035 |
| Model 3: irritable score (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication | 2.22 (0.16, 4.28) | 0.14 | 0.035 |
| Model 4: irritable score (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and anxiety | 1.82 (− 0.24, 3.87) | 0.11 | 0.082 |
| Model 5: irritable score (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and ADHD symptoms | 1.72 (− 0.39, 3.83) | 0.11 | 0.110 |
| Model 6: irritable score (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication, anxiety and ADHD symptoms | 1.38 (− 0.76, 3.51) | 0.09 | 0.206 |
N for analysis = 232
MFQ Mood and Feelings Questionnaire, ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, T1 at time 1, T2 at time 2, B unstandardised B coefficient (B is the unit increase in MFQ score for every unit increase in irritable score), Beta standardised beta coefficient (Beta is the increase in standard deviations of MFQ score for every standard deviation increase in irritable score)
Association between DMDD at baseline and parent-rated total MFQ score at follow-up
| Outcome: MFQ total (T2) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (standardised) | |||
| Model 1: DMDD (T1): unadjusted | 6.52 (2.50, 10.53) | 0.21 | 0.002 |
| Model 2: DMDD (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms | 4.53 (0.53, 8.52) | 0.15 | 0.027 |
| Model 3: DMDD (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication | 4.52 (0.51, 8.53) | 0.15 | 0.027 |
| Model 4: DMDD (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and anxiety | 3.97 (− 0.019, 7.96) | 0.13 | 0.051 |
| Model 5: DMDD (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and ADHD symptoms | 3.81 (− 0.25, 7.87) | 0.12 | 0.066 |
| Model 6: DMDD (T1): controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication, anxiety and ADHD symptoms | 3.32 (− 0.74, 7.38) | 0.11 | 0.108 |
N for analysis = 224
MFQ Mood and Feelings Questionnaire, DMDD disruptive mood dysregulation disorder, ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, T1 at time 1, T2 at time 2, B unstandardised B coefficient (B is the difference in MFQ score at follow-up in those with DMDD compared to those without DMDD), Beta standardised beta coefficient (Beta is the standard deviation unit difference in MFQ score between those with DMDD and those without DMDD)
Association between persistent irritability and parent-rated total MFQ score at follow-up
| Outcome: MFQ total (T2) | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Beta (standardised) | |||
| Model 1: persistent irritability: unadjusted | 10.49 (4.86, 16.12) | 0.34 | <0.001 |
| Model 2: persistent irritability: controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms | 11.79 (6.28, 17.30) | 0.38 | <0.001 |
| Model 3: persistent irritability: controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication | 12.06 (6.54, 17.59) | 0.39 | <0.001 |
| Model 4: persistent irritability: controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and anxiety | 11.23 (5.78, 16.70) | 0.36 | <0.001 |
| Model 5: persistent irritability: controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms and ADHD symptoms | 11.24 (5.68, 16.80) | 0.36 | <0.001 |
| Model 6: persistent irritability: controlling for baseline age, gender, depression symptoms, ADHD medication, anxiety and ADHD symptoms | 10.81 (5.30, 16.33) | 0.35 | <0.001 |
N for analysis = 107
MFQ Mood and Feelings Questionnaire, ADHD attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder, T1 at time 1, T2 at time 2, B unstandardised B coefficient (B is the difference in MFQ score at follow-up in those with persistent irritability compared to those with remitted irritability), Beta standardised beta coefficient (Beta is the standard deviation unit difference in MFQ score between those with persistent irritability and those without persistent irritability)