reviewPsychosomatic MedicineNov 1, 2004Closed access

Depression as a Risk Factor for Mortality in Patients With Coronary Heart Disease: A Meta-analysis

University of Freiburg

PubMed
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Abstract

Background

Prospective studies on physically healthy subjects have shown an association between depression and the subsequent development of coronary heart disease (CHD). The relative risk in meta-analytic aggregation is 1.64 (confidence interval [CI], 1.29–2.08) for any CHD event. However, the adverse impact of depression on CHD patients has not yet been the subject of a meta-analysis.

Objective

To quantify the impact of depressive symptoms (eg, BDI, HADS) or depressive disorders (major depression) on cardiac or all-cause mortality. We analyzed the strength of the relationship, the time dependency, and the differences in studies using depressive symptoms or a clinical diagnosis as predictors of mortality. Method: English and German language databases (Medline, PsycInfo, PSYNDEX) from 1980 to 2003 were searched for prospective cohort studies. Sixty-two publications were identified. The inclusion criteria were met by 29 publications reporting on 20 studies. A random model was used to estimate the combined overall effect as crude odds ratios (OR) or adjusted hazard ratios (HR [adj]).

Citation impact

1,364
total citations
FWCI
24.18
Percentile
100%
References
83
Citations per year

Authors

3

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Depression (economics)
  • Internal medicine
  • Prospective cohort study
  • Odds ratio
  • Hazard ratio
  • Meta-analysis
  • Cohort study
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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