Abstract

Considerable epidemiologic evidence and plausible biobehavioral mechanisms suggest that depression is an independent risk factor for diabetes. Moreover, reducing the elevated diabetes risk of depressed individuals is imperative given that both conditions are leading causes of death and disability. However, because no prior study has examined clinical diabetes outcomes among depressed patients at risk for diabetes, the question of whether depression treatment prevents or delays diabetes onset remains unanswered. Accordingly, we examined the effect of a 12-month collaborative care program for late-life depression on 9-year diabetes incidence among depressed, older adults initially free of diabetes. Participants were 119 primary care patients [M (SD) age: 67.2 (6.9) years, 41% African American] with a depressive disorder but without diabetes enrolled at the Indiana sites of the Improving Mood-Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment (IMPACT) trial. Incident diabetes cases were defined as diabetes diagnoses, positive laboratory values, or diabetes medication prescription, and were identified using electronic medical record and Medicare/Medicaid data. Surprisingly, the rate of incident diabetes in the collaborative care group was 37% (22/59) versus 28% (17/60) in the usual care group. Even though the collaborative care group exhibited greater reductions in depressive symptom severity (p = .024), unadjusted (HR = 1.29, 95% CI: 0.69–2.43, p = .428) and adjusted (HR = 1.18, 95% CI: 0.61–2.29, p = .616) Cox proportional hazards models indicated that the risk of incident diabetes did not differ between the treatment groups. Our novel preliminary findings raise the possibility that depression treatment alone may be insufficient to reduce the excess diabetes risk of depressed, older adults.

Highlights

  • Type 2 diabetes is a serious metabolic condition that is highly prevalent worldwide (9%) and has substantial consequences for individuals and for society [1]

  • Consistent with results of the parent Improving Mood-Promoting Access to Collaborative Treatment (IMPACT) trial [7] and other depression trials involving older adults [27], we found that depressed, older primary care patients randomized to collaborative depression care exhibited significantly greater reductions in depressive symptoms than those randomized to usual care

  • Collaborative care patients had a similar risk of incident clinical diabetes over nine years as usual care patients, even when alternative definitions of incident diabetes were considered

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Summary

Introduction

Type 2 diabetes is a serious metabolic condition that is highly prevalent worldwide (9%) and has substantial consequences for individuals and for society [1]. Depression treatment and diabetes risk 2017 and is not available upon request or for public sharing. It may be possible to replicate this study with any available dataset that contained clinical trial data assessing a collaborative depression treatment and long-term diabetes incidence data for all participants. The Methods section of this paper contains detailed information for other researchers to conduct similar analyses in a similar patient population

Methods
Results
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