1. A cross-national study of depression in preclinical dementia: A COSMIC collaboration study.
- Author
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Carles S, Carrière I, Reppermund S, Davin A, Guaita A, Vaccaro R, Ganguli M, Jacobsen EP, Beer JC, Riedel-Heller SG, Roehr S, Pabst A, Haan MN, Brodaty H, Kochan NA, Trollor JN, Kim KW, Han JW, Suh SW, Lobo A, la Camara C, Lobo E, Lipnicki DM, Sachdev PS, Ancelin ML, and Ritchie K
- Subjects
- Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Cohort Studies, Female, Humans, Incidence, Longitudinal Studies, Male, Dementia complications, Depression epidemiology, Prodromal Symptoms
- Abstract
Introduction: Depression commonly accompanies Alzheimer's disease, but the nature of this association remains uncertain., Methods: Longitudinal data from the COSMIC consortium were harmonized for eight population-based cohorts from four continents. Incident dementia was diagnosed in 646 participants, with a median follow-up time of 5.6 years to diagnosis. The association between years to dementia diagnosis and successive depressive states was assessed using a mixed effect logistic regression model. A generic inverse variance method was used to group study results, construct forest plots, and generate heterogeneity statistics., Results: A common trajectory was observed showing an increase in the incidence of depression as the time to dementia diagnosis decreased despite cross-national variability in depression rates., Discussion: The results support the hypothesis that depression occurring in the preclinical phases of dementia is more likely to be attributable to dementia-related brain changes than environment or reverse causality., (© 2020 the Alzheimer's Association.)
- Published
- 2020
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