| Literature DB >> 35770239 |
Ivan Aprahamian1,2, Marcus K Borges3, Denise J C Hanssen2, Hans W Jeuring2, Richard C Oude Voshaar2.
Abstract
Although the public importance of frailty is widely acknowledged by the World Health Organization, physical frailty is still largely neglected in geriatric mental health care. Firstly in this narrative review, we summarize the knowledge on the epidemiology of the association between depression and frailty, whereafter implications for treatment will be discussed. Even though frailty and depression have overlapping diagnostic criteria, epidemiological studies provide evidence for distinct constructs which are bidirectionally associated. Among depressed patients, frailty has predictive validity being associated with increased mortality rates and an exponentially higher fall risk due to antidepressants. Nonetheless, guidelines on the treatment of depression neither consider frailty for risk stratification nor for treatment selection. We argue that frailty assessment enables clinicians to better target the pharmacological and psychological treatment of depression as well as the need for interventions targeting primarily frailty, for instance, lifestyle interventions and reduction of polypharmacy. Applying a frailty informed framework of depression treatment studies included in a meta-analysis reveals that the benefit-harm ratio of antidepressants given to frail depressed patients can be questioned. Nonetheless, frail-depressed patients should not withhold antidepressants as formal studies are not available yet, but potential adverse effects should be closely monitored. Dopaminergic antidepressants might be preferable when slowness is a prominent clinical feature. Psychotherapy is an important alternative for pharmacological treatment, especially psychotherapeutic approaches within the movement of positive psychology, but this approach needs further study. Finally, geriatric rehabilitation, including physical exercise and nutritional advice, should also be considered. In this regard, targeting ageing-related abnormalities underlying frailty that may also be involved in late-life depression such as low-grade inflammation might be a promising target for future studies. The lack of treatment studies precludes firm recommendations, but more awareness for frailty in mental health care will open a plethora of alternative treatment options to be considered.Entities:
Keywords: depression; depressive disorder; frailty
Mesh:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35770239 PMCID: PMC9234191 DOI: 10.2147/CIA.S328432
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Clin Interv Aging ISSN: 1176-9092 Impact factor: 3.829
Longitudinal Studies on Relationship Between Depression and Frailty
| Lakey et al 2012 | 27,652, | _/ 6.5% | 14.9%/ _ | Depressive symptoms and anti-depressant use were associated with frailty. Depressive symptom scores had higher risk for frailty (OR= 2.19, 95%CI= 1.86-2.59). |
| Paulson & Lichtenberg 2013 | 1,361, ≥ 80 years, mean = 84.1 years, | 31.5%/ 32.8% | 31.8%/ 22% | Vascular depression and risk factors for cerebrovascular burden was a predictor of frailty. |
| Aprahamian et al 2018 | 881, ≥ 60 years, mean = 81.6 years, | 37.7%/ 18.7% | 9%/ 4.7% | Combination of depression anti-depressant use (monotherapy with SSRI) was associated with frailty at baseline (OR= 2.82, 95%CI= 1.69 – 4.69) and over 12 months follow-up (OR= 2.75, 95%CI= 1.84 –4.11). |
| Zhang et al 2019 | 1,168, 70-84 years, mean = 74.9 years, | 5.9%/ 8.9% | 9.3%/_ | Depressive symptoms were associated with increased risk of frailty (OR= 5.64, 95%CI= 2.85 – 11.14) at baseline, and incident frailty (OR= 2.79, 95%CI= 1.09 –7.10) over 3years follow-up. |
| Prina et al 2019 | 12,844, ≥ 65 years, 74.7 years, 64.5% women, Follow-up= 3-5 years | 12%/26.9% | 27.4%-33%/_ | Depression was associated with a 59% increased hazard of incident frailty using the modified Fried phenotype and 19% for multidimensional frailty |
| Borges et al 2021 | 181, ≥ 60 years, mean = 73.2 years, 55.2% women | 37.5%/ 25.4% | 18.6%/31% | The presence of a depressive disorder was significantly associated with the onset of frailty (adjusted OR for FRAIL and FI-36: 3.07 [95% CI = 1.03–9.17] and 3.76 [95% CI = 1.09–12.97], respectively. |
| Da mata et al 2021 | 1,109, 60-96 years, mean = 72 years, 61.1% women | _/12.8% | 12.6%/_ | Older adults with depressive symptoms presented a 29% greater risk of developing frailty (IRR = 1.29; 95%CI= 1.26 –1.32). However, the adjusted model showed not to be statistically significant (IRR = 1.21; 95%CI= 0.62 – 2.36) ( |
| Feng et al 2014 | 1,827, ≥ 55 years, mean = 65.9 years, 64.3% women | 2.5%/ 11.4% | _/ 2.4% | Frailty more than doubled risk of depression (OR= 2.36, 95%CI= 1.08 – 5.15). |
| Makizako et al 2015 | 3,025, ≥ 65 years, mean = 71.4 years, 50. 3% women | _/ _ | _/ 7.5% | Frailty was an independent predictor of depressive symptoms (OR= 1.86, 95%CI= 1.05 – 3.28). |
| Collard et al 2015 | 888, ≥ 65 years, mean = 73.4 years, 56.3% women | 21.3%/ 6.8% | _/ 30.6% | Frail older adults had 26% higher risk of depression (RR=1.26, 95%CI= 1.09–1.45) and lower likelihood of remission (RR= 0.72, 95%CI= 0.58 – 0.91). |
| Collard et al 2017 | 280, ≥ 60 years, mean = 70.7 years, 66.1% women | 26.4%/ 100% | _/ _ | Frailty was associated with greater severity of depressive disorder. Reduction of depressive symptoms was greater among frail older adults. |
| Veronese et al 2017 | 4,077, ≥ 60 years (60 – 90 years), mean= 70.9 years, 53% women | 6.3% /_ | _/ 8.8% | In a logistic regression analysis, adjusted for 18 potential confounders, pre-frailty (OR = 0.89; 95% CI= 0.54–1.46; p = 0.64) and frailty (OR = 1.22; 95% CI= 0.90–1.64; p = 0.21) did not predict the onset of depression at follow-up. Among the criteria included in the frailty definition, only slow gait speed (OR = 1.82; 95% CI= 1.00–3.32; p = 0.05) appeared to predict a higher risk of depression. |
| Chu et al 2020 | 1,264, 70-87 years, mean = 76.7 years, 52.7% women | 9.0%/ 10.6% | _/_ | Frailty was associated with depressive symptoms at baseline (OR = 4.64, 95%CI= 2.49 – 8.66), and over 18 months follow-up (OR = 2.12, 95%CI= 1.17 – 3.83). |
Figure 1The pathophysiological interaction between geriatric depression and frailty. Both conditions present an interplay in immune-metabolic dysregulation, autonomic nervous system dysregulation, dopamine depletion due to frontostriatal network impairment, and mitochondrial dysfunction.