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Incidence and risk factors of depressive symptoms in the highest age groups and competing mortality risk. Evidence from the AgeCoDe-AqeQualiDe prospective cohort study

Authors :
Alexander Maier
Cornelius Durrant-Finn
Alexander Pabst
Margrit Löbner
Marion Eisele
Christian Brettschneider
Kathrin Heser
Luca Kleineidam
Siegfried Weyerer
Jochen Werle
Michael Pentzek
Angela Fuchs
Dagmar Weeg
Edelgard Mösch
Birgitt Wiese
Anke Oey
Hendrik van den Bussche
Hans-Helmut König
Michael Wagner
Wolfgang Maier
Steffi G. Riedel-Heller
Martin Scherer
Melanie Luppa
Source :
Journal of affective disorders 308, 494-501 (2022). doi:10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.081
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Elsevier Science, 2022.

Abstract

Only a few studies have investigated incidence and risk factors of depression in the highest age groups. This study aims to determine incidence rates as well as risk factors of incident depressive symptoms in latest life, adjusting for the competing event of mortality.Data of a prospective, longitudinal, multi-centered cohort study conducted in primary care - the AgeCoDe-/AgeQualiDe study. 2436 GP patients aged 75+ years were assessed from baseline to sixth follow-up every 18 months and from seventh to ninth follow-up every 10 months. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the 15-item version of the Geriatric Depression Scale (cut-off ≥6). Competing risk regression models were used to assess determinants of incident depressive symptoms, taking care of accumulated mortality.The incidence of depressive symptoms was 39 per 1000 person-years (95% CI 36-42; last observed exit 13.26 person-years at risk). In a competing risk regression model, female sex, unmarried family status, subjective cognitive decline as well as vision and mobility impairment were significant risk factors of incident depression.Excluding individuals with a lack of ability to provide informed consent at baseline may have influenced the incidence of depression. Depressive symptoms were not assessed by DSM criteria. Furthermore, in studies with voluntary participation, participation bias can never be completely avoided.Findings provide a better understanding of risk and protective factors of depressive symptoms in the oldest age taking mortality as a competing event into account. Addressing this aspect in future research may yield new insights in that research field.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of affective disorders 308, 494-501 (2022). doi:10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.081
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....aa9d95f4dd026ba223e9422cc1b87a8c
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.081