Depression and mortality: Artifact of measurement and analysis?

KM Appleton, JV Woodside, D Arveiler, B Haas… - Journal of affective …, 2013 - Elsevier
KM Appleton, JV Woodside, D Arveiler, B Haas, P Amouyel, M Montaye, J Ferrieres…
Journal of affective disorders, 2013Elsevier
Background Previous research demonstrates various associations between depression,
cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and mortality, possibly as a result of the different
methodologies used to measure depression and analyse relationships. This analysis
investigated the association between depression, CVD incidence (CVDI) and mortality from
CVD (MCVD), smoking related conditions (MSRC), and all causes (MALL), in a sample data
set, where depression was measured using items from a validated questionnaire and using …
Background
Previous research demonstrates various associations between depression, cardiovascular disease (CVD) incidence and mortality, possibly as a result of the different methodologies used to measure depression and analyse relationships. This analysis investigated the association between depression, CVD incidence (CVDI) and mortality from CVD (MCVD), smoking related conditions (MSRC), and all causes (MALL), in a sample data set, where depression was measured using items from a validated questionnaire and using items derived from the factor analysis of a larger questionnaire, and analyses were conducted based on continuous data and grouped data.
Methods
Data from the PRIME Study (N=9798 men) on depression and 10-year CVD incidence and mortality were analysed using Cox proportional hazards models.
Results
Using continuous data, both measures of depression resulted in the emergence of positive associations between depression and mortality (MCVD, MSRC, MALL). Using grouped data, however, associations between a validated measure of depression and MCVD, and between a measure of depression derived from factor analysis and all measures of mortality were lost.
Limitations
Low levels of depression, low numbers of individuals with high depression and low numbers of outcome events may limit these analyses, but levels are usual for the population studied.
Conclusions
These data demonstrate a possible association between depression and mortality but detecting this association is dependent on the measurement used and method of analysis. Different findings based on methodology present clear problems for the elucidation and determination of relationships. The differences here argue for the use of validated scales where possible and suggest against over-reduction via factor analysis and grouping.
Elsevier
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