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Mood disorders increase mortality mainly through dementia: A community-based prospective cohort study

Authors
An, HoyoungYang, Hee WonOh, Dae JongLim, EunjiShin, JinMoon, Dong GyuSuh, Seung WanByun, SeonjeongKim, Tae HuiKwak, Kyung PhilKim, Bong JoKim, Shin GyeomKim, Jeong LanMoon, Seok WooPark, Joon HyukRyu, Seung-HoLee, Dong WooLee, Seok BumLee, Jung JaeJhoo, Jin HyeongBae, Jong BinHan, Ji WonKim, Ki Woong
Issue Date
Aug-2022
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Inc.
Keywords
Depression; bipolar disorder; dementia; mortality; survival analysis
Citation
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry, v.56, no.8, pp 1017 - 1024
Pages
8
Journal Title
Australian and New Zealand Journal of Psychiatry
Volume
56
Number
8
Start Page
1017
End Page
1024
URI
https://scholarworks.bwise.kr/sch/handle/2021.sw.sch/21607
DOI
10.1177/00048674211041937
ISSN
0004-8674
1440-1614
Abstract
Objective: The effects of mood disorders on mortality may be mediated by their effects on the risk of dementia, and interventions to reduce the occurrence of dementia may reduce their overall mortality. This study aimed to investigate the direct effects of depressive and bipolar disorders on the 6-year risk of mortality and also their indirect effects on mortality due to their effect on the risk of dementia. Methods: A total of 5101 Koreans were selected from a community-based prospective cohort study, and 6-year risks of mortality and dementia in participants with depressive and bipolar disorders were estimated by Cox proportional hazard analysis. The direct and indirect effects of depressive and bipolar disorders on the risk of mortality were estimated using structural equation modeling. Results: The depressive and bipolar disorder groups showed 51% and 85% higher 6-year mortality, and 82% and 127% higher risk of dementia, respectively, compared to euthymic controls. The effects of depressive and bipolar disorders on mortality were mainly mediated by their effects on the risk of dementia in a structural equation model. The direct effects of each mood disorder on mortality were not significant. Conclusion: Both depressive and bipolar disorders increased the risks of mortality and dementia, and the effects of mood disorders on mortality were mainly mediated through dementia. As dementia occurs later in life than mood disorders, measures to prevent it may effectively reduce mortality in individuals with a history of mood disorders, as well as being more feasible than attempting to control other causes of death.
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