4.7 Article

Sex-specific depressive symptoms as markers of pre-Alzheimer dementia: findings from the Three-City cohort study

Journal

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-019-0620-5

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Funding

  1. Inserm
  2. University of Bordeaux Victor Segalen
  3. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale
  4. Caisse Nationale Maladie des Travailleurs
  5. Direction Generale de la Sante
  6. Mutuelle Generale de l'Education Nationale (MGEN)
  7. Bourgogne and Languedoc Roussillon
  8. Fondation de France
  9. Agence Nationale de la Recherche ANR PNRA
  10. Fondation Plan Alzheimer

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Late-life depression, as a potential marker of pre-dementia, has seldom been explored by symptom dimension and sex, despite sexual dimorphic differences. This study aimed to examine whether specific depressive dimensions were associated with pre-Alzheimer's disease dementia (pre-AD), separately for women and men. Data were drawn from 5617 (58% women) community-dwellers aged 65+ recruited in 1999-2000 and followed at 2-year intervals for 12 years. We used Cox proportional hazard models to study associations between time-dependent Centre for Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D) symptom dimensions (namely somatic, depressed, positive affect, and interpersonal challenge) and pre-AD, defined retrospectively from validated diagnoses established 3.5 (IQR: 3.2-4.0) years onwards. Analyses were performed according to overall depressive symptomatology (DS+: CES-D score 16) and antidepressant/anxiolytic medication use (AA). Results indicated that in DS+ women only, all four dimensions were significantly associated with pre-AD in the AA- group, in particular somatic item 'Mind' and depressed affect items 'Depressed' and 'Blues'. The most depression-specific dimension, depressed affect, was also significantly associated with pre-AD in the DS-AA-women (HR:1.28, 95%CI: 1.12;1.47). In both sexes, in the DS- groups somatic affect was the most robust pre-AD marker, irrespective of treatment (women: HR = 1.22, 95%CI: 1.08;1.38; men: HR = 1.30, 95%CI: 1.14;1.48). Our findings highlight sex-specific associations between depressive symptom dimensions and pre-AD, modulated by depressive symptomatology and treatment. Assessment of specific symptom dimensions taking into account overall symptomatology and treatment could help identify and target high-risk AD-dementia profiles for interventions.

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