Abstract

Background: Epidemiological studies using the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) have reported inconsistencies regarding the relationship between age and total scores. To determine whether this discrepancy is due to the stability of the distribution of PHQ-9 total scores against age, we investigated whether the total score distribution remains stable during adulthood, and also investigated the mathematical patterns of the total score distribution.Methods: The present study utilized data from 15,847 participants of the 2009–2014 United States National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey, all of whom responded to all PHQ-9 items. The stability of the total score distribution among different age groups was examined using overlap coefficients and graphical analysis.Results: High overlap coefficients were observed between all age groups for the distributions of PHQ-9 total scores, suggesting that the distribution of PHQ-9 total scores remains stable against age. Graphical analysis demonstrated that distributions of PHQ-9 total scores were similar across age groups. In addition, distributions of PHQ-9 total scores exhibited an exponential pattern, except at the lower end of the distribution.Conclusions: Our findings indicate that the stability of the distribution of PHQ-9 total scores throughout adulthood may underlie inconsistencies in the evidence regarding age-related changes in total depression scores.

Highlights

  • Clinical and scientific research studies have aimed to identify the age at which people become more susceptible to depression [1]

  • The present study investigated whether the distribution of total scores on the PHQ-9 remains stable across all age groups in the general population

  • As we analyzed the distribution of total scores, participants who did not respond to all PHQ-9 items (2,052 individuals) were excluded from the analysis

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Summary

Introduction

Clinical and scientific research studies have aimed to identify the age at which people become more susceptible to depression [1]. Numerous epidemiological studies have attempted to clarify age-related changes in depressive symptoms [1, 3, 5,6,7]. Epidemiological studies have reported inconsistent evidence regarding age-related changes in total scores on depression screening scales during adulthood, suggesting a difficulty in replicating the relationship between age and depressive symptoms using traditional screening instruments. Epidemiological studies using the nine-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) have reported inconsistencies regarding the relationship between age and total scores. To determine whether this discrepancy is due to the stability of the distribution of PHQ-9 total scores against age, we investigated whether the total score distribution remains stable during adulthood, and investigated the mathematical patterns of the total score distribution

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