Trajectories of Depressive Symptoms and Incident Diabetes: A Prospective Study.

TitleTrajectories of Depressive Symptoms and Incident Diabetes: A Prospective Study.
Publication TypeJournal Article
Year of Publication2022
AuthorsBurns, RJ, Briner, E, Schmitz, N
JournalAnnals of Behavioral Medicine
Volume56
Issue3
Pagination311-316
ISSN Number1532-4796
Keywordsdepression, Depressive symptoms, Diabetes, Trajectories
Abstract

BACKGROUND: Elevated depressive symptoms are associated with an increased risk for diabetes. Depression is a heterogeneous and chronic condition in which symptoms may remit, emerge, lessen, or intensify over time.

PURPOSE: The purpose of this study was to determine if trajectories of depressive symptoms measured at five time points over 8 years predicted incident diabetes over an 8-year follow-up in middle-aged and older adults. A secondary aim was to determine if trajectories of depressive symptoms predict incident diabetes, above and beyond depressive symptoms measured at a single time point.

METHODS: Data came from the Health and Retirement Study (n = 9,233). Depressive symptoms were measured biennially from 1998 to 2006. Self-reported incident diabetes was measured during an 8-year follow-up.

RESULTS: Five trajectories of depressive symptoms were identified (no depressive symptoms, low depressive symptoms, low-moderate depressive symptoms, moderate depressive symptoms, elevated and increasing depressive symptoms). Compared to the no depressive symptoms trajectory group (referent), all other trajectory groups were at higher risk of developing diabetes after adjusting for covariates. In most cases, trajectory group membership was associated with incident diabetes after controlling for depressive symptoms at a single time point.

CONCLUSIONS: Patterns of depressive symptoms over time were associated with incident diabetes. Patterns of depressive symptoms may be more predictive of diabetes incidence than depressive symptoms measured at a single time point.

DOI10.1093/abm/kaab094
Citation Key11998
PubMed ID34791017