Abstract

Diabetes and depression are risk factors for cardiovascular disease, but the evidence about their interaction effect on long-term health outcomes among Latinos is lacking. We aimed to investigate the joint association of diabetes and subsequent depressive symptoms with mortality among older Latinos, an understudied racial/ethnic group with high prevalence of diabetes. This study included 1,495 adults from the Sacramento Area Latino Study on Aging. We employed Cox proportional-hazards models to estimate the adjusted hazard ratios [aHRs] for cardiovascular and all-cause mortality according to diabetes status at enrollment and depressive symptoms a year after the enrollment. We used marginal structural models to adjust for time-varying confounders. The mean age (standard deviation) of participants was 70 (6.6) years. Over follow-up (median 7.7 years), diabetes and depressive symptoms were individually associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality (diabetes, aHR[95% CI]=2.13[1.60-2.84]; depressive symptoms, aHR[95% CI]=1.62[1.09-2.39]) and all-cause mortality (diabetes, aHR[95% CI]=1.92[1.53-2.41]; depressive symptoms, aHR[95% CI]=1.41[1.02-1.94]). After adjusting for time-varying confounders, we found a multiplicative interaction between diabetes and subsequent depressive symptoms for cardiovascular mortality (aHR[95% CI]=2.94[1.07-8.39]), but not all-cause mortality (aHR[95% CI]=1.80[0.81-4.35]). Using a longitudinal cohort of community-dwelling older Latinos, we found that diabetes and subsequent depressive symptoms were jointly associated with increased risk of cardiovascular mortality.

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