Objective: To determine whether depressive symptoms measured
at baseline are associated with mortality and to describe the course of
depressive symptoms and their relation to physical decline in patients
over a 6-year period.
Design: Prospective cohort study conducted from 1990 through
1996.
Setting: Urban academic primary care group practice.
Patients: A cohort of 3,767 patients aged 60 years and older
screened for depressive symptoms during routine office visits using the
Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D) participated
in the mortality study. A subsample of 300 patients with CES-D scores 16
or above and a subsample of 100 patients with CES-D scores less than 16
participated in the study of the course of depressive symptoms and physical
decline.
Measurements and Main Results: Mortality by December 1995 was
measured for all screened patients; reinterviewed patients completed the
CES-D and the Sickness Impact Profile (SIP). The mean follow-up period
was 45 months (+/- SD 12.2 months); 561 (14.9%) of the patients died by
December 1995. In proportional hazards models, age, gender, race, history
of smoking, serum albumin value, and an ideal body weight in the lowest
10% were significant correlates of time to death, but the baseline CES-D
was not. Patients with depressive symptoms had significantly worse physical
and psychosocial functioning scores on the SIP than did patients without
depressive symptoms. Using the generalized estimating equation method,
the strongest predictor of the current CES-D score was the patient's prior
CES-D score. However, worsening physical functioning score on the SIP was
also independently correlated with worse CES-D scores p < or = .001).
Conclusions: Symptoms of depression were not associated with
mortality in this cohort of older adults. However, patients with depressive
symptoms reported greater functional impairment than did those without
depressive symptoms. Moreover, decline in physical functioning was independently
correlated with a concurrent increase in depressive symptoms.