From the Journals

MS plus depression can increase risk of death, vascular disease


 

FROM NEUROLOGY

People with multiple sclerosis (MS) and depression have an increased risk of death, compared with those with one or neither condition, as well as an increased risk of vascular disease, a new study has found. “The effects of depression and MS on all-cause mortality are synergistic,” wrote lead author Raffaele Palladino, MD, PhD, research associate, faculty of medicine, Imperial College London.

Raffaele Palladino, MD, PhD, Research Associate, Faculty of Medicine, School of Public Health, Imperial College London (United Kingdom).

Dr. Raffaele Palladino

The study was published in Neurology.

To assess the association between depression, vascular disease, and death in patients with MS, the researchers launched a population-based retrospective cohort study that reviewed English medical records from January 1987 to December 2018 and matched people with and without MS. Ultimately, 12,251 people with MS were matched with 72,572 controls. At baseline, 21% of the MS group (n = 2,535) and 9% of the controls (n = 6,278) had depression. Women were the majority in both cohorts and were more likely than men to be depressed.

People with both MS and depression had an all-cause mortality rate of 10.3 cases per 100,000 person-years (95% confidence interval, 9.17-11.57), compared with 10.6 for people with MS without depression (95% CI, 9.99-11.21), 3.6 for people with depression but not MS (95% CI, 3.18-4.05), and 2.5 for people with neither condition (95% CI, 2.42-2.64). Compared with controls without depression, the 10-year hazard of all-cause mortality was increasingly greater in controls with depression (hazard ratio, 1.75; 95% CI, 1.59-1.91), people with MS but not depression (HR, 3.88; 95% CI, 3.66-4.10), and people with MS and depression (HR, 5.43; 95% CI, 4.88-5.96). Overall, 14% of the observed effect on mortality was attributable to the interaction between MS status and depression.

As for vascular diseases, people with MS had an increased risk regardless of their depression status. That said, people with MS and depression (HR, 3.30; 95% CI, 2.37-4.23) had a notably higher risk than people with MS and no depression (HR, 1.48; 95% CI, 1.23-1.74). Women with MS and depression also had a greater risk of vascular disease than women with MS and no depression, while men with MS did not have significantly different risks of acute coronary syndrome or composite macrovascular disease than those in the control group who did not suffer from depression.

Does treating depression decrease the likelihood of vascular disease?

“The take-home message for me is the importance of treating depression in this population, in which we see it with great regularity,” Joseph Berger, MD, professor of neurology and associate chief of the multiple sclerosis division at the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, said in an interview. “The question that I have is: If you treat depression in an individual with MS or an individual who is simply depressed and thus at risk for the subsequent development of vascular disease, does it decrease the likelihood of their subsequent development of vascular disease in comparison to had you not?

“I presume it does,” he added, noting that “the theories underlying why depression would increase one’s risk of subsequent vascular disease are enumerated by the authors, including such things as increased inflammation. Now, the inflammation may be contributing to the depression, or the depression may be contributing to the inflammation; it may be one of those chicken-and-egg scenarios. But if you decrease the depression, do you thereby decrease the inflammation, which has a pernicious effect on endothelial cells and increases one’s vascular risk?

“Alternatively, lifestyle in depressed patients is also altered,” he said. “They’re far less likely to engage in exercise, healthy habits, and healthy diets, and more likely perhaps to smoke. These all need to be addressed, but this study certainly gives you a greater impetus as a MS neurologist to address the issue of depression, realizing that there is also this comorbidity of vascular disease.”

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