• Medicine · Jun 2020

    Observational Study

    Prevalence and association of depression with uremia in dialysis population: a retrospective cohort analysis.

    • Jin Liu, Fan Zhang, Yujie Wang, and Dan Wu.
    • Department of Renal, The Affiliated Hospital of Southwest Medical University, Luzhou, Sichuan Province, China.
    • Medicine (Baltimore). 2020 Jun 12; 99 (24): e20401.

    AbstractDepression may hamper the immune system and nutritional status, which leads to poor outcomes of treatment. It is very common in dialysis patients. There are the numbers of parameters affected by the depression of patients and available studies are not enough to define the association between biological parameters and depression in the dialysis population. The purposes of the study were to find the prevalence of depression and association of it with the biochemical abnormalities in the dialysis patients.The selected battery of tests (clinician-administered questionnaires) were applied to dialysis patients (test cohort, n = 298) and caregivers (control cohort, n = 202) for establishing depression. The demographic and clinical conditions of participants were also collected. Univariate analysis followed by multiple regression analysis was performed for demographical parameters, clinical conditions, and laboratory results for the detection of association of them with depression. The abnormal test considered as more than 2 SD of mean below the normal value. Out of all tests, at least 2 abnormal tests were considered as mild depression. More than half of abnormal parameters among all tests were considered as moderate depression and all abnormal parameters were considered as severe depression.There was a significant difference for all the test between dialysis patients and the caregivers (P < .0001 for all). The half (153 out of 298) of dialysis patients were depressive and clinically asymptomatic. 70 (23%) dialysis patients were mild depressive, 45 (15%) dialysis patients were moderate depressive, and 38 (13%) dialysis patients were severely depressive. Serum phosphate (P = .023), level of parathyroid hormone (P = .021), and urea reduction rate (P = .048) were directly associated with depression.Biochemical abnormalities (serum phosphate level, parathyroid hormone, and urea reduction rate) were independent predictors of depression in the dialysis population.Level of evidence: III.

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