4.4 Article

The association between depression and bone metabolism: a US nationally representative cross-sectional study

Journal

ARCHIVES OF OSTEOPOROSIS
Volume 17, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER LONDON LTD
DOI: 10.1007/s11657-022-01154-1

Keywords

Depression; Bone mineral density; Fracture; Osteoporosis; National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES)

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [81874017, 81960403, 82060405]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Gansu Province of China [20JR5RA320]
  3. Cuiying Scientific and Technological Innovation Program of Lanzhou University Second Hospital [CY2017-ZD02]

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This population-based study found an association between depression and lower bone mineral density, as well as an increased risk of fractures and osteoporosis.
The Summary This population-based study investigated the association between depression and bone mineral density (BMD), fractures, and osteoporosis in the US population. We found that participants with depression had lower BMD and were more likely to have fractures and osteoporosis. Background Depression, fractures, and osteoporosis are common in middle-aged and elderly, but their associations remained unclear. Objective To investigate the association between depression and bone mineral density (BMD), osteoporosis, and fracture in a middle-aged and elderly US population. Methods A nationally representative cross-sectional study used the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) datasets. Depression was assessed and stratified using the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9). The multiple logistic regression models and the logistic binary regression models were used to analyze the association between depression and BMD, fractures, and osteoporosis. Gender, age, race, educational level, poverty ratio, body mass index (BMI), smoke, alcohol use, physical activity, and diabetes were included as covariates. Subgroup analysis was also conducted on gender, age, race, and education level. Results In total, 9766 participants were included after a series of exclusions, and 4179 (42.79%) had at least mild depressive symptoms. Compared to the participants without depression, those with depression had a lower total femur, femoral neck, and total spine BMD after adjusting multiple covariates. The multivariable-adjusted logistic binary regression models demonstrated that participants with depression more likely have hip fractures (OR = 1.518, 95% CI: 1.377-2.703, P = 0.000), spine fractures (OR = 1.311, 95% CI: 1.022-1.678, P = 0.030), and osteoporosis (OR = 1.621, 95% CI: 1.388-1.890, P = 0.000). Subgroup analysis revealed that depressed participants who were males, non-Hispanic White, < 70 years, and not highly educated had a lower BMD and easily had osteoporosis. Conclusion Depression was associated with lower BMD, particularly in the spine, males, Hispanic-White, and not highly educated populations. Moreover, people with depression were more likely to have fractures and osteoporosis.

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