Journal of Personalized Medicine (Apr 2022)

The Detrimental Clinical Associations of Anxiety and Depression with Difficult Asthma Outcomes

  • Wei Chern Gavin Fong,
  • Ishmail Rafiq,
  • Matthew Harvey,
  • Sabina Stanescu,
  • Ben Ainsworth,
  • Judit Varkonyi-Sepp,
  • Heena Mistry,
  • Mohammed Aref Kyyaly,
  • Clair Barber,
  • Anna Freeman,
  • Tom Wilkinson,
  • Ratko Djukanovic,
  • Paddy Dennison,
  • Hans Michael Haitchi,
  • Ramesh J. Kurukulaaratchy

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/jpm12050686
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 12, no. 5
p. 686

Abstract

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Difficult asthma describes asthma in which comorbidities, inadequate treatment, suboptimal inhaler technique and/or poor adherence impede good asthma control. The association of anxiety and depression with difficult asthma outcomes (exacerbations, hospital admissions, asthma control, etc.) is unclear. This study assessed the clinical associations of anxiety and depression with difficult asthma outcomes in patients with a specialist diagnosis of difficult asthma. Using real-world data, we retrospectively phenotyped patients from the Wessex Asthma Cohort of Difficult Asthma (N = 441) using clinical diagnoses of anxiety and depression against those without anxiety or depression (controls). Additionally, we stratified patients by severity of psychological distress using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS). We found that depression and/or anxiety were reported in 43.1% of subjects and were associated with worse disease-related questionnaire scores. Each psychological comorbidity group showed differential associations with difficult asthma outcomes. Anxiety alone (7.9%) was associated with dysfunctional breathing and more hospitalisations [anxiety, median (IQR): 0 (2) vs. controls: 0 (0)], while depression alone (11.6%) was associated with obesity and obstructive sleep apnoea. The dual anxiety and depression group (23.6%) displayed multimorbidity, worse asthma outcomes, female predominance and earlier asthma onset. Worse HADS-A scores in patients with anxiety were associated with worse subjective outcomes (questionnaire scores), while worse HADS-D scores in patients with depression were associated with worse objective (ICU admissions and maintenance oral corticosteroid requirements) and subjective outcomes. In conclusion, anxiety and depression are common in difficult asthma but exert differential detrimental effects. Difficult asthma patients with dual anxiety and depression experience worse asthma outcomes alongside worse measures of psychological distress. There is a severity-gradient association of HADS scores with worse difficult asthma outcomes. Collectively, our findings highlight the need for holistic, multidisciplinary approaches that promote early identification and management of anxiety and depression in difficult asthma patients.

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