Higher Rates of Depression in Polymyalgia Rheumatica Are Strongly Associated With Poor Physical Function.

IF 2.4 4区 医学 Q2 RHEUMATOLOGY
JCR: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology Pub Date : 2025-06-01 Epub Date: 2025-03-04 DOI:10.1097/RHU.0000000000002219
Jessica L Leung, Natalie Deeble, Victor Yang, David F L Liew, Russell R C Buchanan, Claire E Owen
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Abstract

Objective: To assess the prevalence of and risk factors for depression in a cohort of patients with polymyalgia rheumatica (PMR) compared with a cohort of participants without PMR (control group).

Methods: In a longitudinal cohort study, patients with recently diagnosed PMR (within 3 months of starting treatment) were recruited together with matched control subjects. Assessments were undertaken 3 and 21 months after initiation of steroid therapy. Mood was assessed using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) and the 36-item Short-Form Survey (SF-36) Mental Health (MH) scale, with scores ≥8 on the HADS and ≤56 on the SF-36 MH Scale indicating depression. Other data collected included current prednisolone dose, PMR-Activity Score, pain visual analog scale, SF-36, and Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index.

Results: Thirty-six subjects with PMR and 32 control subjects were recruited. At baseline, depression rates were significantly higher in PMR cases than in control subjects (22.2% vs. 3.1% and 25.0% vs. 0.0% as determined by HADS and SF-36 MH Scale, respectively). After adjusting for a previous diagnosis of depression, poor physical function (Health Assessment Questionnaire Disability Index) had the strongest association with depression determined by SF-36 MH Scale, with odds ratios of 8.19 (95% confidence interval, 1.06-63.46; p = 0.04) and 13.25 (95% confidence interval, 1.15-152.31; p = 0.04) at baseline and follow-up, respectively. Other significant associations with depression were identified with current prednisolone dose, disease activity (PMR-Activity Score), pain (pain visual analog scale and SF-36 Bodily Pain Scale), and fatigue (SF-36 Vitality Scale).

Conclusion: Depression affects up to 1 in 4 patients with PMR. The strongest association is with poor physical function, highlighting the psychological impact of physical limitations in PMR and the need to address comorbid depression to optimize patient outcomes.

多肌痛风湿病患者抑郁率高与身体功能差密切相关。
目的:比较风湿性多肌痛(PMR)患者与无PMR患者(对照组)抑郁的患病率和危险因素。方法:在一项纵向队列研究中,招募了最近诊断为PMR的患者(开始治疗3个月内)和匹配的对照组。在类固醇治疗开始后3个月和21个月进行评估。采用医院焦虑抑郁量表(HADS)和36项简短形式调查(SF-36)心理健康量表对情绪进行评估,HADS得分≥8分,SF-36 MH量表得分≤56分表示抑郁。收集的其他数据包括当前泼尼松龙剂量、pmr活动评分、疼痛视觉模拟量表、SF-36和健康评估问卷残疾指数。结果:共招募PMR患者36例,对照组32例。在基线时,PMR病例的抑郁率明显高于对照组(分别由HADS和SF-36 MH量表测定,分别为22.2%对3.1%和25.0%对0.0%)。调整既往抑郁诊断后,SF-36 MH量表测定的身体功能差(健康评估问卷残疾指数)与抑郁的相关性最强,比值比为8.19(95%可信区间1.06-63.46;P = 0.04)和13.25(95%可信区间,1.15-152.31;P = 0.04)。其他与抑郁症的显著关联被确定为当前泼尼松龙剂量、疾病活动性(PMR-Activity Score)、疼痛(疼痛视觉模拟量表和SF-36身体疼痛量表)和疲劳(SF-36活力量表)。结论:抑郁症影响多达1 / 4的PMR患者。最强烈的关联是身体功能差,突出了PMR中身体限制的心理影响,以及解决共病抑郁症以优化患者预后的必要性。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
3.50
自引率
2.90%
发文量
228
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: JCR: Journal of Clinical Rheumatology the peer-reviewed, bimonthly journal that rheumatologists asked for. Each issue contains practical information on patient care in a clinically oriented, easy-to-read format. Our commitment is to timely, relevant coverage of the topics and issues shaping current practice. We pack each issue with original articles, case reports, reviews, brief reports, expert commentary, letters to the editor, and more. This is where you''ll find the answers to tough patient management issues as well as the latest information about technological advances affecting your practice.
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