Abstract

IntroductionAlthough depression is often associated with poor glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), this observation has been inconsistent. This exploratory, post hoc analysis investigated associations between depression parameters and glycemic control using data from a 24-month, prospective, observational, non-interventional study evaluating glycemic response following insulin initiation for T2DM.MethodsWe analyzed data from a 24-month, prospective, observational study that evaluated glycemic response in patients with T2DM who initiated insulin therapy (N = 985) in 5 European countries. Secondary measures included patient-reported diagnosis of depression at baseline, severity of depressed/anxious mood (EuroQol (EQ)-5D item) and diabetes-related distress (Psychological Distress domain of the Diabetes Health Profile, DHP-18). The latter two measures were assessed at baseline and 5 time points throughout the study. Glycemic control was measured by glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) at these same time points. Analyses employed t tests to assess the unadjusted baseline difference in HbA1c between patients with and without the respective depression parameter. The potential effect of demographic and clinical confounding variables was controlled through a linear model structure. Patient HbA1c levels were analyzed by presence/absence of a history of diagnosed depression, depressed mood, and diabetes-related distress.ResultsPatients with higher depression parameters or distress at baseline had significantly higher rates of microvascular complications at baseline. Patients with a history of diagnosed depression or high diabetes-related distress had higher HbA1c than patients without. HbA1c of patients with or without depressed mood was not significantly different at baseline. The proportion of patients with depressed mood declined after insulin initiation, whereas the proportion of patients with high diabetes-related distress did not significantly change. HbA1c improved following insulin initiation, regardless of presence/absence of studied depression/distress parameters at baseline.ConclusionHistory of diagnosed depression, diabetes-related distress, and depressed mood were associated with a higher rate of microvascular complications. Diagnosed depression and diabetes-related distress also showed higher HbA1c at baseline when insulin was initiated. Insulin therapy improved glycemic control, while preexisting depressed mood declined and diabetes-related distress remained unchanged.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1007/s13300-015-0118-y) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Depression is often associated with poor glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), this observation has been inconsistent

  • Interventions aimed at reducing depression among patients with diabetes have not led to the reduction in HbA1c or improvements in self-care behaviors, and an intervention trial to improve diabetes self-care and glycemic control in elderly patients with diabetes did not lead to reduction in depression [11, 12]

  • To help clarify the link between glycemic control and depression, this study investigated the association between three types of depression/diabetes distress parameters over 24 months in patients with T2DM initiating insulin in a large, observational, non-interventional trial

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Summary

Introduction

Depression is often associated with poor glycemic control in patients with type 2 diabetes mellitus (T2DM), this observation has been inconsistent. This exploratory, post hoc analysis investigated associations between depression parameters and glycemic control using data from a 24-month, prospective, observational, noninterventional study evaluating glycemic response following insulin initiation for T2DM. Poorer self-care among diabetes patients (e.g., adherence to lifestyle recommendations and glucose monitoring) is regarded as a potential contributor to poor glycemic control over time, it cannot fully account for poor control, as depression may impact stress pathways which in turn can affect glycated hemoglobin (HbA1c) levels [9, 10]. Interventions aimed at reducing depression among patients with diabetes have not led to the reduction in HbA1c or improvements in self-care behaviors, and an intervention trial to improve diabetes self-care and glycemic control in elderly patients with diabetes did not lead to reduction in depression [11, 12]

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