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Diagnostic Criteria for Depression in Type 2 Diabetes: A Data-Driven Approach
Authors:Sergio E. Starkstein  Wendy A. Davis  Milan Dragovic  Violetta Cetrullo  Timothy M. E. Davis  David G. Bruce
Affiliation:1School of Medicine & Pharmacology, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia;2School of Psychiatry & Clinical Neuroscience, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia;Chiba University Center for Forensic Mental Health, Japan
Abstract:BackgroundWhile depression is a frequent psychiatric comorbid condition in diabetes and has significant clinical impact, the syndromal profile of depression and anxiety symptoms has not been examined in detail.AimsTo determine the syndromal pattern of the depression and anxiety spectrum in a large series of patients with type 2 diabetes, as determined using a data-driven approach based on latent class analysis (LCA).MethodType 2 diabetes participants from the observational community-based Fremantle Diabetes Study Phase II underwent assessment of lifetime depression using the Brief Lifetime Depression Scale, the Patient Health Questionnaire 9-item version (PHQ-9) for current depression symptoms, and the Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale that was specifically developed and validated for this study. The main outcome measure was classes of patients with a specific syndromal profile of depression and anxiety symptoms based on LCA.ResultsLCA identified four classes that were interpreted as “major anxious depression”, “minor anxious depression”, “subclinical anxiety”, and “no anxious depression”. All nine DSM-IV/5 diagnostic criteria for major depression identified a class with a high frequency of major depression. All symptoms of anxiety had similar high probabilities as symptoms of depression for the “major depression-anxiety” class. There were significant differences between classes in terms of history of depression and anxiety, use of psychoactive medication, and diabetes-related variables.ConclusionsPatients with type 2 diabetes show specific profiles of depression and anxiety. Anxiety symptoms are an integral part of major depression in type 2 diabetes. The different classes identified here provide empirically validated phenotypes for future research.
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