4.5 Article

Age-Related Hearing Loss and Its Association with Depression in Later Life

Journal

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF GERIATRIC PSYCHIATRY
Volume 26, Issue 7, Pages 788-796

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.jagp.2018.04.003

Keywords

Hearing impairment; depression; older adults; successful aging

Funding

  1. Cochlear (a cochlear implant company)
  2. National Institute on Aging [N01-AG-6-2101, N01-AG6-2103, N01-AG-6-2106]
  3. National Institute on Aging (NIA) [R01-AG028050]
  4. National Institute on Aging (NINR) [R01-NR012459]
  5. National Institute for Mental Health [K23-MH099097, R25 MH086466]
  6. Intramural Research Program of the National Institute on Aging

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Objectives: To evaluate the association between age-related hearing loss (ARHL) and depressive symptoms in older adults over time. Methods: Data from the Health Aging and Body Composition study (N = 3075, aged 70-79 at baseline) were used previously to conduct a longitudinal latent class analysis to evaluate depression trajectories (Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression [CES-D] Scale) over 10 years. Restricting to the subset of subjects who had hearing information available (N = 1204), self-reported hearing categories were evaluated over the same period. Association between depression classes and hearing categories were assessed via multinomial logistic regression analyses. Correlation analyses and two-sample t-tests were used to assess cross-sectional associations between depression status and audiometric hearing measures. Results: Low-probability (N = 644), increasing-probability (N = 385), and high-probability (N = 175) trajectories of depressive symptoms were identified for the 10-year period. Impaired/Worsening (N = 182) and Healthy/Improving (N = 1,022) hearing categories were defined using self-reports. With the low-probability depression trajectory as the reference group, subjects reporting Impaired/Worsening hearing had 1.63 times increased odds of having an increasing- (p = 0.0088, 95% CI [1.13, 2.34]) and 1.85 times increased odds of having a high-probability depression trajectory (p = 0.0102, 95% CI [1.16, 2.96]). At Year 5, individuals with depressive symptoms (10CES-D >= 10) had impaired hearing ability measured by audiometric threshold for low-frequency (Adjusted mean difference = 2.29 dBHL, p = 0.0005) and mid-frequency sounds (Adjusted mean difference = 2.28 dBHL, p = 0.0049) compared to those with 10CES-D < 10. Conclusions: ARHL was associated with increased depressive symptoms in older adults. Future studies should investigate whether treatment of ARHL may be an effective prevention and/or therapeutic strategy for depressive symptoms.

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