4.7 Article

Cohort profile of the longitudinal Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) on etiology, course and consequences of depressive and anxiety disorders

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 287, Issue -, Pages 69-77

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2021.03.026

Keywords

longitudinal; depressive disorders; anxiety disorders; course; biomarkers; environment

Funding

  1. Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (ZonMw) [10-0001002]
  2. VU University Medical Center
  3. GGZ in Geest
  4. Leiden University Medical Center
  5. Leiden University
  6. GGZ Rivierduinen
  7. University Medical Center Groningen
  8. University of Groningen
  9. Lentis
  10. GGZ Friesland
  11. GGZ Drenthe
  12. Rob Giel Onderzoekscentrum

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The Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA) is a long-term research project aiming to study the causes, development, and consequences of depression and anxiety disorders. Through face-to-face assessments repeated six times over 9 years, a total of 3348 participants including individuals with depressive and/or anxiety disorders, their siblings, and healthy controls were recruited. The data collected have been utilized for numerous scientific papers and are available to researchers outside the NESDA consortium.
Introduction: The Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA, www.nesda.nl) is a longitudinal, multisite, naturalistic, case-control cohort study set up to examine the etiology, course and consequences of depressive and anxiety disorders. This paper presents a cohort profile of NESDA. Methods and Results: The NESDA sample recruited initially 2329 persons with a remitted or current DSM-IV based depressive (major depressive disorder, dysthymia) and/or anxiety disorder (panic disorder, social phobia, agoraphobia, generalized anxiety disorder), 367 of their siblings and 652 healthy controls, yielding a total of 3348 participants. Half-day face-to-face assessments of participants started in 2004 and since then have been repeated six times over a period of 9 years. A 13-year follow-up assessment is ongoing, at what time we also recruit offspring of participants. Retention rates are generally high, ranging from 87.1% (after 2 years) to 69.4% (after 9 years). Psychiatric diagnostic interviews have been administered at all face-to-face assessments, as was monitoring of clinical characteristics, psychosocial functioning and somatic health. Assessed etiological factors include e.g. early and current environmental risk factors, psychological vulnerability and resilience factors as well as (neuro)biology through hypothesis-driven biomarker assessments, genome-wide and large-scale ?-omics? assessments, and neuroimaging assessments. Limitations: The naturalistic design allows research into course and consequences of affective disorders but is limited in treatment response interpretation. Conclusions: NESDA provides a strong research infrastructure for research into depressive and/or anxiety disorders. Its data have been used for many scientific papers describing either NESDA-based analyses or joint collaborative consortia-projects, and are in principle available to researchers outside the NESDA consortium.

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