Title: Depression and cardiovascular disease: recent advances
1Depression and cardiovascular disease recent
advances
- Constantine Lyketsos, MD, MHS
- CoDirector, Division of Geriatric
Neuropsychiatry - Professor of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences,
Epidemiology, Mental Health - School of Medicine
- Bloomberg School of Public Health
- The Johns Hopkins University
2Collaborators
- Hochang Ben Lee, MD
- Assistant Professor of Psychiatry, JHU
- Sherita Hill Golden
- Assistant Professor of Medicine, JHU
- Annette Fitzpatrick, PhD
- Assistant Professor of Epidemiology, U of W
- Moyses Szklo, MD
- Professor of Epidemiology, JHU
- Multi-Ethnic Study of Atherosclerosis
3Overview
- Depression in patients with CVD
- Effect of depression on CVD outcomes
- Depression as a risk factor for CVD
- Treatment of depression in CVD
- Reversal of adverse CVD outcomes?
- The future understanding mechanism
- The MESA Depression-Cognition Study
4Definitions
- Depression heterogeneous
- DSM-IV major or minor depression
- In some cases defined by scores above a scale
cut-off, typically the BDI or CES-D - Other important constructs e.g., depression
without sadness, anhedonia - CVD Disease of blood vessels with coronary and
cerebrovascular syndromes, such as MI, CVA - CHD coronary heart disease
- CVA cerebrovascular accident
5Heart disease
- One month after myocardial infarction
- Major depression 15
- Minor depression 30
- Congestive heart failure
- Major depression 14
- Minor depression 20
Frasure-Smith, Lesperance and collaborators
several publications
6Stroke
- First month after stroke
- Major depression 18
- Minor depression 32
- Anterior, right hemisphere stroke 67
- Over the first year after stroke
- Annual attack rate about 60
Robinson, Morris and collaborators several
publications
7Domains of impact
- Intrinsic to being a psychiatric case
- Mental suffering
- Dangerousness
- Frailty (e.g., weight loss, deconditioning)
- Aggression
- Suicide
- Functional outcomes
- Medical outcomes of the associated disease
8Heart disease
- Depression increases risk of heart disease 2-3x
- After a first myocardial infarction
- Major depression leads to 4x increase of death
- Congestive heart failure
- Major depression leads to 3x increased
readmission - Major depression leads to 2.2x increased
mortality - Post-CABG (next slide)
Frausre-Smitn, Lesperance and collaborators
several publications
9Depression (1m), outcomes (5y)
McKhann et al, Lancet 2000, Borowicz et al,
Psychosomatics, 2002
10Recovery in functioning after stroke
p lt .01
Robinson and collaborators several publications
11Depression as a risk factor for CHD
12How does treatment affect medical outcomes in CVD?
13Benefit from treating depression?
- Montreal Heart Attack Readjustment Trial (M-HART)
- women receiving nonpharmacologic anxiety-reducing
intervention after MI more likely to die (RR
1.39) - Enhancing Recovery in Coronary Heat Disease
(ENRICHD) - psychotherapy for depression did not improve
survival post-MI - SADHART study (Sertraline Antidepressant Heart
Attack Randomized Trial) - no decrease in mortality with sertraline
treatment - Myocardial Infarction and Depression Intervention
Trial (MIND-IT) underway in the Netherlands - compares mirtazapine, citalopram, and placebo in
reducing post-MI mortality among depressed
persons
14Stroke probability of survival for depressed
patients
P .004
Robinson, et al AJP, 2003
15What is going on?
- The association does not exist
- Depression is indicator of more severe CVD
- Treating depression not expected to affect CVD
- Depression and CVD have similar causes
- Treating one does not affect the other, unless
the cause is treated - Depression is heterogeneous
- Understanding mechanisms linking depression (OR
subtypes of depression) with CVD should produce
better targets for therapy
16The future confirm the association and what is
the mechanism?
- Biological effects of depression
- Heart rate variability (increased)
- Endothelial reactivity (decreased)
- Coagulation (pro-coagulant)
- Inflammation (pro-inflammatory)
- Cortisolemia
- Behavioral effects of depression
- Co-morbid smoking, drinking
- Less physical activity
- Worse diet
- Worse adherence with CVD treatments
17 DEPRESSION
- Biological
- e.g., inflammatory
Plaque formation
CARDIOVASCULAR
Behavioral smoking, diet, physical activity
Obesity
CONFOUNDERS
Obesity
Socioeconomic status Gender Race, ethnicity
18The MESA Study
- 6,814 adults between the ages of 45 and 84
- 38 Caucasians, 28 African-Americans, 22
Hispanics, and 12 Chinese - NO clinical CVD at baseline
- Followed every two years in clinical examinations
- Completed 2, in process of 3, starting 4 fall 05
- Depression assessed every time on CES-D
- Window into heterogeneity
- Total score, severe depression, DSM-IV
approximation, individual items
19MESA biological assessments
- Coronary Calcium on CT
- Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) of the heart and
carotid arteries - Enhanced gray-scale and Doppler ultrasound of
carotid arteries - Flow-mediated brachial vasodilation
- Arterial wave form tonometry
- Electrocardiogram (ECG)
20MESA other assessments
- Laboratory determinations of key blood and urine
variables - Inflammation (e.g., CRP), coagulability, lipids,
oxidative, insulin resistance - DNA storage, genetic analyses
- Anthropometry
- Ankle/brachial blood pressure index
- Blood Pressure
- CLINICAL EVENT SURVEILLANCE
21MESA behavioral assessments
- Alcohol intake
- Smoking
- Dietary assessment
- Physical and other leisure activity
22Initial cross-sectional findings MESA
examination 1
- Depression associated with
- Requiring mediations for diabetes
- OR 1.30 (1.03-1.64)
- Ankle brachial index 0.9
- OR 1.51 (1.05-2.18)
- Smoking currently
- OR 1.42 (1.15-1.76)
- Maybe with
- CT coronary calcium
- OR 1.31 (0.95-1.80)
- High blood pressure
- OR 1.15 (0.98-1.34)
23Next steps
- Analyses of existing MESA data in process
- Focus on depression and subclinical CVD
- Longitudinal, testing hypotheses, models
- Accumulating CVD events (e.g., MI, CVA)
- Link depression to clinical CVD
- Seeking funding to look at depression, cognition,
subclinical, and clinical CVD relationship
24Conclusions
- Depression is linked closely to CVD
- Associated with increased risk for AND worse CVD
outcomes after onset - Depression reduction by current means does not
seem to affect CVD outcomes - Need better understanding of the linking
mechanisms in the context of the heterogeneity of
depression
25Thank you!Eucaristw!