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Speerforck, Sven; Dodoo-Schittko, F.; Brandstetter, S.; Apfelbacher, C.; Hapke, U.; Jacobi, F.; Grabe, H. J.; Baumeister, S. E. und Schomerus, G. (2019): 12-year changes in cardiovascular risk factors in people with major depressive or bipolar disorder: a prospective cohort analysis in Germany. In: European Archives of Psychiatry and Clinical Neuroscience, Bd. 269, Nr. 5: S. 565-576

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Abstract

BackgroundMajor depressive disorder (MDD) and bipolar disorder are associated with certain cardiovascular risk factors (CVRFs), but it is unclear whether they are associated with unfavourable changes of clinically manifest CVRFs over time.MethodsWe used baseline and 12-year follow-up (n=1887) data from the German Health Interview and Examination Survey 1998. Multivariable linear regression models assessed associations between lifetime CIDI-diagnosed mood disorders at baseline and continuous risk factor-related outcomes (blood pressure, HbA1c, LDL-C, HDL-C, triglycerides, BMI) at follow-up.ResultsWe did not find consistent deterioration of CVRFs in persons with compared to persons without MDD. Analyses pointed to severity of mood disorder as an important correlate of long-term changes of comorbid hypertension: while a history of mild MDD was not associated with changes in CVRFs, moderate MDD was associated with lower blood pressure [systolic: beta=- 7.5 (CI - 13.2;- 1.9);diastolic: beta=- 4.5 (CI - 7.8;- 1.3)] and a history of bipolar disorder was associated with higher systolic blood pressure at follow-up (beta=14.6;CI 4.9-24.4). Further, severe MDD was weakly associated with a higher BMI at follow-up [beta=1.2 (CI 0.0;2.4)]. These outcomes were not mediated by use of psychotropic medication and remained statistically significant after adjusting for the use of antihypertensive medication.ConclusionSince most investigated parameters showed no associations, participants with a lifetime history of MDD in this cohort did not carry a specific risk for a worsening of pre-existing clinically manifest CVRFs. Our findings extend evidence of MDD severity and bipolar disorder as important correlates of long-term changes of arterial hypertension and obesity.

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