Abstract

IntroductionDepressive disorder has been conceptualised as a condition of accelerated biological ageing. We operationalised a frailty index (FI) as marker for biological ageing aimed to explore the bidirectional, longitudinal association between frailty and either depressive symptoms or depressive disorder.MethodsA cohort study with 6‐year follow‐up including 377 older (≥60 years) outpatients with a DSM‐IV‐defined depressive disorder and 132 never‐depressed controls. Site visits at baseline, 2 and 6‐year follow‐up were conducted and included the CIDI 2.0 to assess depressive disorder and relevant covariates. Depressive symptom severity and mortality were assessed every 6 months by mail and telephone. A 41‐item FI was operationalised and validated against the 6‐year morality rate by Cox regression (HRFI = 1.04 [95% CI: 1.02–1.06]).ResultsCox regression showed that a higher FI was associated with a lower chance of remission among depressed patients (HRFI = 0.98 [95% CI: 0.97–0.99]). Nonetheless, this latter effect disappeared after adjustment for baseline depressive symptom severity. Linear mixed models showed that the FI increased over time in the whole sample (B[SE] = 0.94 (0.12), p < .001) with a differential impact of depressive symptom severity and depressive disorder. Higher baseline depressive symptom severity was associated with an attenuated and depressive disorder with an accelerated increase of the FI over time.ConclusionsThe sum score of depression rating scales is likely confounded by frailty. Depressive disorder, according to DSM‐IV criteria, is associated with accelerated biological ageing. This argues for the development of multidisciplinary geriatric care models incorporating frailty to improve the overall outcome of late‐life depression.

Highlights

  • Depressive disorder has been conceptualised as a condition of accelerated biological ageing

  • Cox ‐regression showed that a higher frailty index (FI) lowered the chance of remission in the unadjusted model (HRFI = 0.98 [95% confidence interval (CI): 0.97–0.99], p = .003)

  • The increase in frailty of 1% per year that we found is slightly lower than the assumed average increase of health deficits of 3% per year found in cross‐sectional studies comparing age groups[26] as well as in some longitudinal studies,[23,24] but is comparable to the values found in longitudinal cohort studies across Europe.[19,25]

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Summary

Key Points

To disentangle the association between frailty and depression, depression should be diagnosed according to diagnostic criteria, as scores on depression rating scales are confounded by frailty. Depressive disorder is associated with accelerated ageing, as indexed by the frailty index

| INTRODUCTION
| Study design and sample
| RESULTS
Findings
| Final conclusion
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