Title: Epidemiology of Depression in MS
1Epidemiology of Depression in MS
Scott B. Patten MD, PhD. Associate
Professor, University of Calgary.
2Depression - Definitions
- A description of mood
- A clustering of symptoms
- A mood disorder
3Depression As a Mood Disorder
- Major Depressive Disorder
- Dysthymic Disorder
- Bipolar I Disorder
- Bipolar II Disorder
- Adjustment Disorders
- Organic Mood Disorders
- Secondary to Medical Condition
- Substance-induced Mood Disorder
4Depression As a Mood Disorder
- Major Depressive Disorder
- Dysthymic Disorder
- Bipolar I Disorder
- Bipolar II Disorder
- Adjustment Disorders
- Organic Mood Disorders
- Secondary to Medical Condition
- Substance-induced Mood Disorder
5DSM-IV Major Depression
- Certain depressive symptoms
- They should be severe and persistent
- The symptoms are NOT due to
- Bereavement (grief)
- Physical causes
6- Depressed mood (sadness, tearfulness)
- Loss of interest (anhedonia)
- Sleep problems
- Appetite/weight changes
- Changes involving physical movement
- Changed thinking style (e.g. hopelessness)
- Problems with concentration memory
- Fatigue
- Thoughts about death and/or suicide
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8Epidemiological Definitions Prevalence
- Prevalence
- Proportion of a population with a disease or
outcome at a point in time (point prevalence) - Proportion of a population with a disease or
outcome during an interval of time (period
prevalence) - Proportion of a population having developed an
outcome at any previous time (lifetime
prevalence)
9General Population MD Prevalence
- Point Prevalence 1.5
- Annual Prevalence 5
- Lifetime Prevalence 10
10Major Depression Prevalence in MS
11Epidemiological Solutions?
- Sampling directly from the population
- Achieving larger sample sizes
- Use of large-scale general health survey data
- The Canadian Community Health Survey
- Use of administrative data
- The AHCIP
12Canadian Community Health Survey (2000/01)
- Conducted by Statistics Canada Part of the
National Roadmap Initiative - Probability sample from the (eligible) national
population Labour Force Survey Sampling frame. - Sample size n 130,880
- Included self-reported chronic conditions,
including MS. - Included the CIDI Short Form for Major Depression
(Kessler et al.)
13Depressed Mood?
End
Loss of Interest?
No
No
Yes
Yes
Loss of Interest
4 other symptoms?
End
No
No
3 other symptoms?
End
Yes
No
MDE
Yes
14Depressed Mood?
End
Loss of Interest?
No
No
Yes
Yes
Loss of Interest
4 other symptoms?
End
No
No
3 other symptoms?
End
Yes
No
MDE
Yes
15Depressed Mood?
End
Loss of Interest?
No
No
Yes
Yes
Loss of Interest
4 other symptoms?
End
No
No
3 other symptoms?
End
Yes
No
MDE
Yes
16Depressed Mood?
End
Loss of Interest?
No
No
Yes
Yes
Loss of Interest
4 other symptoms?
End
No
No
3 other symptoms?
End
Yes
No
MDE
Yes
17Epidemiology of MDE in MSCanadian Community
Health Survey
- The weighted prevalence of MS was 0.24 (95 CI
0.20 0.28). - There were 322 people with MS
- Data on subtype not available
- This is consistent with other Canadian estimates.
18Epidemiology of MDE in MSCanadian Community
Health Survey
- Overall Annual Prevalence - 7.4 (95 CI 7.2
7.6). - In women, 9.4 (95 CI 9.1 9.7)
- In men, 5.3 (95 CI 5.1 5.6).
- 18-45 years 9.0 (95 CI 8.7 9.3)
- 45 and over 5.5 (95 CI 5.2 5.7)
19Table 1. Annual Major Depression Prevalence in
CCHS Subjects with and without MS. Â
weighted not including MS. Â Â Â Â
20Table 2. Stratified Analysis, Major Depression
Prevalence in CCHS Subjects with and without MS.
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21Logistic Regression Analysis
- An MS by age interaction term was not significant
(Wald test statistic 2.40, p 0.12), so the
model was simplified by elimination of this term.
- Women had higher prevalence (OR 1.9, 95 CI 1.8
2.0) - The younger age group had higher prevalence (OR
for age 18-45 1.7, 95 CI 1.6 1.9) - The adjusted odds ratio for major depression
among persons with MS was 2.3 (95 CI 1.6 3.3).
22Limitations
- Age and duration of MS was highly correlated.
- The test for age-sex interaction may have lacked
power
23AHCIP
- The Canadian health system works on a public
insurance model - ICD diagnostic codes are submitted with physician
billings - This administrative data can be used for
research purposes
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25MS Case Identification
- A longitudinal record covering the period 1985 to
2002 was created. - Cases were defined as those with two or more
physician services for MS (ICD-9-CM 340) during
this period. - ICD-9CM codes for affective disorders (bipolar,
unipolar, unspecified) were also identified.
26Results
- N2,332,418 subjects identified, aged 15 and
over. - There were 8,999 persons with MS, a prevalence of
386 per 100,000 (95 CI 377 394). - The sample included 178,612 subjects with an
affective disorder, leading to a prevalence of
7.7.
27Affective Disorder Prevalence, by Age Group and
MS Status
28Relative Prevalence for Affective Disorders and
MS, by Age Group Sex
29Table 1. Logistic Regression Analysis
all p-values testing the null hypothesis of
OR1 are lt 0.002. this age group was treated
as the baseline group for age.
30Conclusions
- The association between MS and major depression
is real and not due to selection bias. - The strength of association between MS and major
depression is stronger than that of chronic
conditions generally.
31Conclusions
- There is no single strength of association
between major depression and MS. - MS is more strongly associated with affective
disorders in men than women - MS is more strongly associated with affective
disorders in young people - The burden of major depression in MS appears to
be greater in women, however.
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