Frontiers in Endocrinology (Mar 2024)

Associations of comorbid depression with cardiovascular-renal events and all-cause mortality accounting for patient reported outcomes in individuals with type 2 diabetes: a 6-year prospective analysis of the Hong Kong Diabetes Register

  • Yiu-Lam Yeung,
  • Ka-Long Lee,
  • Eric SH. Lau,
  • Eric SH. Lau,
  • Eric SH. Lau,
  • Tsun-Fung Yung,
  • Aimin Yang,
  • Aimin Yang,
  • Aimin Yang,
  • Hongjiang Wu,
  • Hongjiang Wu,
  • Hongjiang Wu,
  • Kelly TC. Wong,
  • Kelly TC. Wong,
  • Kelly TC. Wong,
  • Alice PS. Kong,
  • Alice PS. Kong,
  • Alice PS. Kong,
  • Elaine YK. Chow,
  • Elaine YK. Chow,
  • Elaine YK. Chow,
  • Ronald CW. Ma,
  • Ronald CW. Ma,
  • Ronald CW. Ma,
  • Theresa Yeung,
  • Kit-man Loo,
  • Risa Ozaki,
  • Andrea OY. Luk,
  • Andrea OY. Luk,
  • Andrea OY. Luk,
  • Juliana NM. Lui,
  • Juliana NM. Lui,
  • Juliana NM. Lui,
  • Juliana CN. Chan,
  • Juliana CN. Chan,
  • Juliana CN. Chan

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fendo.2024.1284799
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15

Abstract

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BackgroundPsychosocial status and patient reported outcomes (PRO) [depression and health-related quality-of-life (HRQoL)] are major health determinants. We investigated the association between depression and clinical outcomes in Chinese patients with type 2 diabetes (T2D), adjusted for PRO.MethodsUsing prospective data from Hong Kong Diabetes Register (2013-2019), we estimated the hazard-ratio (HR, 95%CI) of depression (validated Patient Health Questionnaire 9 (PHQ-9) score≥7) with incident cardiovascular disease (CVD), ischemic heart disease (IHD), chronic kidney disease (CKD: eGFR<60 ml/min/1.73m2) and all-cause mortality in 4525 Chinese patients with T2D adjusted for patient characteristics, renal function, medications, self-care and HRQoL domains (mobility, self-care, usual activities, pain/discomfort, anxiety/depression measured by EQ-5D-3L) in linear-regression models.ResultsIn this cohort without prior events [mean ± SD age:55.7 ± 10.6, 43.7% women, median (IQR) disease duration of 7.0 (2.0-13.0) years, HbA1c, 7.2% (6.6%-8.20%), 26.4% insulin-treated], 537(11.9%) patients had depressive symptoms and 1923 (42.5%) patients had some problems with HRQoL at baseline. After 5.6(IQR: 4.4-6.2) years, 141 patients (3.1%) died, 533(11.8%) developed CKD and 164(3.6%) developed CVD. In a fully-adjusted model (model 4) including self-care and HRQoL, the aHR of depression was 1.99 (95% confidence interval CI):1.25-3.18) for CVD, 2.29 (1.25-4.21) for IHD. Depression was associated with all-cause mortality in models 1-3 adjusted for demographics, clinical characteristics and self-care, but was attenuated after adjusting for HRQoL (model 4- 1.54; 95%CI: 0.91-2.60), though HR still indicated same direction with important magnitude. Patients who reported having regular exercise (3-4 times per week) had reduced aHR of CKD [0.61 (0.41–0.89)]. Item 4 of PHQ-9 (feeling tired, little energy) was independently associated with all-cause mortality with aHR of 1.66 (1.30-2.12).ConclusionDepression exhibits significant association with CVD, IHD, and all-cause mortality in patients with diabetes, adjusting for their HRQoL and health behaviors. Despite the association between depression and all-cause mortality attenuated after adjusting for HRQoL, the effect size remains substantial. The feeling of tiredness or having little energy, as assessed by item Q4 of the PHQ-9 questionnaire, was found to be significantly associated with an increased risk of all-cause mortality after covariate adjustments. Our findings emphasize the importance of incorporating psychiatric evaluations into holistic diabetes management.

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