Depressive Symptoms In Relation To Clinical Symptom Onset Of Mild Cognitive Impairment

Carol K. Chan,Anja Soldan, Corinne Pettigrew,Mei-Cheng Wang,Jiangxia Wang,Marilyn S. Albert,Paul B. Rosenberg,Rostislav Brichko,Rebecca Gottesman,Ned Sacktor,Scott Turner, Leonie Farrington,Maura Grega, Gay Rudow, Daniel D'Agostino, Scott Rudow,Michael Miller,Susumu Mori,Tilak Ratnanather,Timothy Brown, Hayan Chi, Anthony Kolasny,Kenichi Oishi,Laurent Younes,Abhay Moghekar, Richard O'Brien, Roberta Scherer,David Shade, Ann Ervin, Jennifer Jones, Hamadou Coulibaly, April Patterson, Daisy Zhu,Juan Troncoso, Barbara Crain,Olga Pletnikova,Gay Rudow, Karen Fisher, John Cernansky,David Holtzman,David Knopman,Walter Kukull, Kevin Grimm,John Hsiao,Laurie Ryan, Constantine Lyketsos,Carlos Pardo,Gerard Schellenberg,Leslie Shaw,Madhav Thambisetty,John Trojanowski

INTERNATIONAL PSYCHOGERIATRICS(2019)

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Abstract
Objective: There is increasing evidence of an association between depressive symptoms and mild cognitive impairment (MCI) in cross-sectional studies, but the longitudinal association between depressive symptoms and risk of MCI onset is less clear. The authors investigated whether baseline symptom severity of depression was predictive of time to onset of symptoms of MCI.Method: These analyses included 300 participants from the BIOCARD study, a cohort of individuals who were cognitively normal at baseline (mean age = 57.4 years) and followed for up to 20 years (mean follow-up = 2.5 years). Depression symptom severity was measured using the Hamilton Depression Scale (HAM-D). The authors assessed the association between dichotomous and continuous HAM-D and time to onset of MCI within 7 years versus after 7 years from baseline (reflecting the mean time from baseline to onset of clinical symptoms in the cohort) using Cox regression models adjusted for gender, age, and education.Results: At baseline, subjects had a mean HAM-D score of 2.2 (SD = 2.8). Higher baseline HAM-D scores were associated with an increased risk of progression from normal cognition to clinical symptom onset <= 7 years from baseline (p = 0.043), but not with progression > 7 years from baseline (p = 0.194). These findings remained significant after adjustment for baseline cognition.Conclusions: These results suggest that low levels of depressive symptoms may be predictive of clinical symptom onset within approximately 7 years among cognitively normal individuals and may be useful in identifying persons at risk for MCI due to Alzheimer's disease.
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Key words
mild cognitive impairment,Alzheimer's disease,depression,cognitive impairment
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