Abstract

Major depressive disorder is a common disease with high mortality and morbidity worldwide. Though peak onset is during late adolescence, the prevalence of major depressive disorder remains high throughout adulthood. Leveraging an association study design, this study screened a large number of variables in the 2017 National Survey on Drug Use and Health to characterize differences between adult and youth depression across a wide array of phenotypic measurements. All dichotomous variables were manually identified from the survey for association screening. Association between each dichotomous variable and past-year major depressive episode (MDE) occurrence was calculated as an odds ratio for adults (≥18 years) and youth (12-17 years), and tested for significance with Fischer's exact test. Logarithm of the calculated odds ratios were plotted and fitted to a linear model to assess correlation between adult and youth risk factors. Many of the screened variables showed similar association between past-year depressive episode occurrence in youth and adults; Lin's concordance correlation coefficient between adult and youth associations was 0.91 (95% CI 0.89-0.92). Differentially associated variables were identified, tracking: female sex, alcohol use, cigarette use, marijuana use, Medicaid/CHIP coverage, cognitive changes due to a mental, physical or emotional condition, and respondents' identification of a single depressive event as the worst experienced. While some youth-specific correlates of major depressive episodes were identified through screening, including some novel associations, most examined variables showed similar association with youth and adult depression. Further study of results is warranted, especially concerning the finding of increased association between marijuana use and depressive episodes in youth.

Highlights

  • Depressive disorders are ubiquitous and constitute a substantial source of morbidity and mortality in the United States and other developed nations; almost every health care provider will encounter a patient with some form of depression during his or her career [1,2,3]

  • Many of the screened variables showed similar association between past-year depressive episode occurrence in youth and adults; Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient between adult and youth associations was 0.91

  • While some youth-specific correlates of major depressive episodes were identified through screening, including some novel associations, most examined variables showed similar association with youth and adult depression

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Summary

Introduction

Depressive disorders are ubiquitous and constitute a substantial source of morbidity and mortality in the United States and other developed nations; almost every health care provider will encounter a patient with some form of depression during his or her career [1,2,3]. Many of the affective disorders have an average age of onset during adolescence, but continue to comprise a large portion of psychiatric pathology throughout adulthood [5, 6]. Though peak onset is during late adolescence, the prevalence of major depressive disorder remains high throughout adulthood. Leveraging an association study design, this study screened a large number of variables in the 2017 National Survey on Drug Use and Health to characterize differences between adult and youth depression across a wide array of phenotypic measurements

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