The effect of depression and diabetes on the risk of dementia

Wayne Katon

In the Woodland we are not short of blogs on depression and diabetes – we have looked at depression being a risk factor for diabetes, depression being an increased risk for all cause mortality in diabetes, how collaborative care can improve outcomes in depression and diabetes, whether it is cost effective to treat depression in diabetes and most recently diabetes being a risk factor for dementia in mild cognitive impairment.

This paper adds to the growing evidence and was published in JAMA Psychiatry in April of this year. It comes from Dr Wayne Katon and colleagues; sadly Dr Katon passed away on 1st March 2015. At the RCPsych Liaison Conference last week Prof Michael Sharpe gave a very touching memorial to Dr Katon’s work; he was an inspiration in the field of Liaison Psychiatry, recognising the need for psychiatry in primary care clinics and pioneering collaborative care in the USA.

This paper sets the scene that although depression and type 2 diabetes mellitus may independently increase the risk for dementia, no studies have examined whether the risk for dementia among people with comorbid depression and diabetes is higher than the sum of each exposure individually. Given the increasing incidence of dementia in ageing modern societies, understanding the risk associated with potentially modifiable depression and diabetes disease trajectories is essential.

Methods

They have used our old friend the Danish National registry and completed a population-based cohort of 2.4 million adults, they aimed to study the risk for all-cause dementia among persons with diabetes, depression, or both compared with persons who had neither illness.

Results

They followed up a cohort of 2,454,532 over 50 year olds for a total of 13,834,645 person-years

  • 477,133 (19.4%) had a diagnosis of depression
  • 223,174 (9.1%) had a diagnosis of diabetes and
  • 95,691 (3.9%) had comorbid depression and diabetes

During the study period 59,663 persons (2.4%) developed dementia. Of those participants who developed dementia:

  • 15,729 persons (26.4%) had depression
  • 6466 (10.8%) had diabetes and
  • 4022 (6.7%) had comorbid depression and diabetes

The researchers adjusted for age, sex, calendar period, and marital status, then compared with persons without depression or diabetes:

  • Depression alone was associated with a 83% greater risk for all cause dementia (HR, 1.83 [95% CI, 1.80 to 1.87])
  • Diabetes alone had a 20% greater risk (HR, 1.20 [95% CI, 1.17 to 1.23])
  • Comorbid depression and diabetes, had a 117% greater risk (HR, 2.17 [95% CI, 2.10 to 2.24])

The estimates decreased slightly after adjustment for chronic diseases.

For those younger than 65 years, the hazard ratios for all-cause dementia were

  • Depression alone 2.93 (95% CI, 2.71 to 3.16)
  • Diabetes alone 1.71 (95% CI, 1.49 to 1.97)
  • Comorbid depression and diabetes 4.84 (95% CI, 4.21 to 5.55)

The combined effect of the 2 illness exposures on all-cause dementia risk was larger than the sum of the 2 individual diseases. When they examined the impact of age at onset of diabetes, the HR for the association between early-onset diabetes and the risk for all-cause dementia was significantly higher (HR, 1.82 [95% CI, 1.73 to 1.91]) than that for late-onset diabetes (HR, 1.30 [95% CI, 1.24 to 1.36) (P<.001). Implying that the brain is as sensitive to prolonged diabetes as the other more commonly recognised complications.

Conclusions

Dr Doug Brown, Director of Research and Development at Alzheimer’s Society said:

This was a large and well conducted study looking at almost 2.4 million people in Denmark, which found that of the 59,663 people in the cohort who developed dementia, over a quarter had developed depression, ten per cent developed diabetes and nearly seven per cent developed both. Although insightful, we now need to take this observational study and investigate in more detail before we can draw firm conclusions.

The Danish Registry facilitates large scale cohort studies, however we need to remember that this does not evidence causality. Some limitations of the registry include the potential loss of data from people presenting early in their illness episode and so not reaching specialist services, or prescribed medication. Another limitation which was acknowledged was the lack of data on possible confounders such as health-risk behaviours, including smoking, obesity, and sedentary lifestyle.

Dr Tara Spires-Jones, Reader, Centre for Cognitive and Neural Systems, University of Edinburgh, said:

A thorough understanding of the biology underpinning dementia is necessary for the development of effective therapeutics, and large studies such as this give us clues about important targets for further research.

Dr Katon’s memorial service was held on 3rd May 2015 and Prof Sharpe who attended shared with us that this was played.

Links

Wayne Katon; Henrik Sondergaard Pedersen; Anette Riisgaard Ribe; Morten Fenger-Grøn; Dimitry Davydow; Frans Boch Waldorff; Mogens Vestergaard. Effect of Depression and Diabetes Mellitus on the Risk for Dementia. JAMA Psychiatry. JAMA Psychiatry Published Online: April 15, 2015. doi:10.1001/jamapsychiatry.2015.0082.

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Kirsten Lawson

Kirsten is a Consultant at Kent & Medway NHS and Social Care Partnership NHS Trust. She has previously worked to develop a network of Liaison services across the Trust; service development within community based services and now clinically works on acute inpatient services. Throughout her career she has gained a wealth of experience in management and leadership roles. Kirsten is a displaced Scot; part geek, part Christmas fanatic, part elf and National Patient Safety & Care Award winner. She is passionate about learning and development; bringing Psychiatry to the masses. She can be found on twitter as @LiaisonLawson.

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