4.5 Article

Clinical and societal burden of incident major depressive disorder: A population-wide cohort study in Stockholm

Journal

ACTA PSYCHIATRICA SCANDINAVICA
Volume 146, Issue 1, Pages 51-63

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/acps.13414

Keywords

antidepressant therapy; epidemiology; health resource utilization; major depressive disorder; mortality; observational cohort study; work loss

Categories

Funding

  1. Region Stockholm
  2. Janssen-Cilag AB Sweden

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In this study, the clinical and societal burden of incident MDD was estimated using healthcare data from different levels in a well-defined healthcare region. The results showed that MDD patients experience significant morbidity, higher healthcare resource utilization, work loss, and increased mortality compared to controls.
Objective Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a highly prevalent condition and a significant contributor to global disability. The vast majority of MDD is handled by primary care, but most real-life studies on MDD only include data from secondary care. The aim of this study was therefore to estimate the total clinical and societal burden of incident MDD including data from all healthcare levels in a large well-defined western European healthcare region. Methods Population-wide observational study included healthcare data from Region Stockholm, Sweden's largest region with approximately 2.4 million inhabitants. All patients in Region Stockholm having their first unipolar MDD episode between January 1, 2012, and December 31, 2018, were included. The sample also included matched study population controls. Outcomes were psychiatric and non-psychiatric comorbid conditions, antidepressant therapy use, healthcare resource utilization, work loss, and all-cause mortality. Results In the study period, 137,822 patients in Region Stockholm were diagnosed with their first unipolar MDD episode. Compared with matched controls, MDD patients had a higher burden of non-psychiatric and psychiatric comorbid conditions, 3.2 times higher outpatient healthcare resource utilization and 8.6 times more work loss. MDD was also associated with a doubled all-cause mortality compared with matched controls (HR: 2.2 [95% CI: 2.0-2.4]). Conclusions The high mortality, morbidity, healthcare resource utilization, and work loss found in this study confirms that MDD is associated with individual suffering and low functioning leading to substantial costs for patients and society. These findings should motivate additional efforts in improving outcomes for MDD patients.

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