严重的精神障碍与痴呆症风险增加有关。

0 PSYCHIATRY
Joshua Stevenson-Hoare, Sophie E Legge, Emily Simmonds, Jun Han, Michael J Owen, Michael O'Donovan, George Kirov, Valentina Escott-Price
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:患有精神障碍的人患痴呆症的风险会增加。大多数横断面研究都存在选择偏差、诊断不足和人口代表性差等问题,而关于焦虑症、双相情感障碍和精神病的作用,纵向研究的证据也很有限。电子健康记录(EHR)可对大型队列进行全生命周期跟踪,并包含广泛的诊断信息:目的:利用电子病历评估两个大型人群样本中四类精神障碍(精神分裂症、双相情感障碍/躁狂症、抑郁症和焦虑症)与痴呆症之间的关联:我们利用威尔士近 100 万成年人的电子病历和 228 937 名英国生物库参与者的电子病历,研究了精神分裂症、躁狂症/双相情感障碍、抑郁症、焦虑症与痴呆症后续风险之间的关系:在安全匿名信息链接中,痴呆症诊断前几年首次诊断为精神障碍的发生率急剧上升,在痴呆症诊断前一年达到所有精神障碍诊断的峰值。除焦虑症外,精神障碍与随后的痴呆症诊断高度相关:精神分裂症、躁狂症/躁郁症和抑郁症的HRs分别为2.87、2.80和1.63。英国生物库也发现了类似的模式(HRs 分别为 4.46、3.65 和 2.39),焦虑也与痴呆症有关(HR=1.34)。如果将精神病诊断的发病年龄分为10年,则所有年龄段的人患痴呆症的风险都会增加:结论:精神障碍与继发性痴呆的风险增加有关,更严重的精神障碍的风险更大:临床意义:精神病发病较晚,临床医生应警惕可能出现的初期痴呆症。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Severe psychiatric disorders are associated with increased risk of dementia.

Background: Individuals with psychiatric disorders have an increased risk of developing dementia. Most cross-sectional studies suffer from selection bias, underdiagnosis and poor population representation, while there is only limited evidence from longitudinal studies on the role of anxiety, bipolar and psychotic disorders. Electronic health records (EHRs) permit large cohorts to be followed across the lifespan and include a wide range of diagnostic information.

Objective: To assess the association between four groups of psychiatric disorders (schizophrenia, bipolar disorder/mania, depression and anxiety) with dementia in two large population-based samples with EHR.

Methods: Using EHR on nearly 1 million adult individuals in Wales, and from 228 937 UK Biobank participants, we studied the relationships between schizophrenia, mania/bipolar disorder, depression, anxiety and subsequent risk of dementia.

Findings: In Secure Anonymised Information Linkage, there was a steep increase in the incidence of a first diagnosis of psychiatric disorder in the years prior to the diagnosis of dementia, reaching a peak in the year prior to dementia diagnosis for all psychiatric diagnoses. Psychiatric disorders, except anxiety, were highly significantly associated with a subsequent diagnosis of dementia: HRs=2.87, 2.80, 1.63 for schizophrenia, mania/bipolar disorder and depression, respectively. A similar pattern was found in the UK Biobank (HRs=4.46, 3.65, 2.39, respectively) and anxiety was also associated with dementia (HR=1.34). Increased risk of dementia was observed for all ages at onset of psychiatric diagnoses when these were divided into 10-year bins.

Conclusions: Psychiatric disorders are associated with an increased risk of subsequent dementia, with a greater risk of more severe disorders.

Clinical implications: A late onset of psychiatric disorders should alert clinicians of possible incipient dementia.

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