Abstract

ObjectiveTo assess the bidirectional association between chronic pain and depressive symptoms among middle-aged and older adults from two prospective cohort studies. MethodsWe used prospective data (12y of follow-up) from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing (n = 9149, 5018 women, 65.0 ± 10.2y) and the Health and Retirement Study (n = 16,883, 9810 women, 66.9 ± 10.3y), including data from seven waves of each cohort between 2006 and 2018/2019. Depressive symptoms were assessed using the Centre of Epidemiological Studies Depression scale, while chronic pain was estimated using questions about the frequency of being troubled with pain. We used random-intercept cross-lagged panel models to assess the bidirectional association between pain and depressive symptoms, adjusting for confounders. ResultsThere was a cross-lagged effect of chronic pain with depressive symptoms (ELSA: β: 0.038; 95%CI: 0.011–0.066. Standardized coefficient (B): 0.021. SHARE: β: 0.044; 95%CI: 0.023–0.065. B: 0.023–0.024) as well as depressive symptoms with pain (ELSA: β: 0.010; 95%CI: 0.002–0.018. B: 0.017–0.019. SHARE: 0.011; 95%CI: 0.005–0.017. B: 0.020–0.021). Moreover, there were auto-regressive effects of both chronic pain (ELSA: β: 0.149; 95%CI: 0.128–0.171. SHARE: β: 0.129; 95%CI: 0.112–0.145) and depressive symptoms (ELSA: β: 0.149; 95%CI: 0.130–0.168. SHARE: β: 0.169; 95%CI: 0.154–0.184). ConclusionWe identified a modest bidirectional association between depressive symptoms and chronic pain, using two large prospective ageing cohorts.

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