Bidirectional Association Between Multimorbidity and Frailty and the Role of Depression in Older Europeans.

IF 4.3 2区 医学 Q1 GERIATRICS & GERONTOLOGY Journals of Gerontology Series A-Biological Sciences and Medical Sciences Pub Date : 2023-10-28 DOI:10.1093/gerona/glad178
Zhaolong Feng, Ze Ma, Wei Hu, Qida He, Tongxing Li, Jiadong Chu, Xuanli Chen, Qiang Han, Na Sun, Yueping Shen
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Abstract

Background: Although previous studies have reported an association between multimorbidity and frailty, its direction and mechanism remain unclear. This study aimed to investigate the direction of this association, as well as the role of depression among older Europeans.

Methods: We used a cross-lagged panel design to evaluate the temporal relationship between multimorbidity and frailty and the role of depression. Multimorbidity status was assessed by the self-reporting of 14 chronic diseases. Frailty was assessed based on the frailty phenotype. The European-Depression Scale (EURO-D) was used to assess depression.

Results: There was a bidirectional relationship between frailty and multimorbidity. More severe multimorbidity predicted greater frailty (β = 0.159; p < .001) and vice versa (β = 0.107; p < .001). All paths from multimorbidity to frailty were stronger than the paths from frailty to multimorbidity (b1-a1: β = 0.051; p < .001). Likewise, early multimorbidity change was a significant predictive factor for late frailty change (β = 0.064; p < .001) and vice versa (β = 0.048; p < .001). Depression in Wave 5 (T5) mediated the association between frailty in Wave 4 (T4) and multimorbidity in Wave 6 (T6; indirect effect: β = 0.004; bootstrap 95% confidence interval: 0.003, 0.006).

Conclusions: A positive, bidirectional association was observed between multimorbidity and frailty. Depression may be a potential cause of an increased risk of multimorbidity later in life in frail older adults. Early monitoring of frailty and depression may slow the progression of multimorbidity, thereby interrupting the vicious cycle.

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欧洲老年人多发病与虚弱的双向关联及抑郁症的作用。
背景:尽管先前的研究报道了多发性疾病和虚弱之间的联系,但其方向和机制尚不清楚。本研究旨在调查这种联系的方向,以及抑郁症在欧洲老年人中的作用。方法:我们使用交叉滞后面板设计来评估多发病和虚弱之间的时间关系以及抑郁症的作用。通过14种慢性病的自我报告来评估多发病状态。虚弱是根据虚弱表型进行评估的。欧洲抑郁症量表(EURO-D)用于评估抑郁症。结果:虚弱与多发病之间存在双向关系。更严重的多发病预示着更大的虚弱(β = 0.159;p 结论:多发性疾病和虚弱之间存在着积极的双向联系。抑郁症可能是虚弱的老年人日后患多发性疾病风险增加的潜在原因。早期监测虚弱和抑郁可能会减缓多发性疾病的进展,从而阻断恶性循环。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
10.00
自引率
5.90%
发文量
233
审稿时长
3-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Publishes articles representing the full range of medical sciences pertaining to aging. Appropriate areas include, but are not limited to, basic medical science, clinical epidemiology, clinical research, and health services research for professions such as medicine, dentistry, allied health sciences, and nursing. It publishes articles on research pertinent to human biology and disease.
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