Depressive Symptoms, Antidepressant Medication Use, and New Onset of Diabetes in Participants of the Diabetes Prevention Program and the Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study

Publication Description
To assess in the Diabetes Prevention Program and Diabetes Prevention Program Outcomes Study whether diagnosis of diabetes predicted elevated depressive symptoms (DS) or use of antidepressant medicine (ADM) following diagnosis; whether diabetes status or duration had significant effect on DS or ADM use; and to determine the associations between A1C, fasting plasma glucose (FPG), normalization of FPG, and DS or ADM use after diagnosis. Diabetes Prevention Program participants in three treatment arms (intensive life style, metformin, placebo) were assessed for diabetes, glucose control, ADM use, and DS, measured using the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). Among 3234 participants, 1285 developed diabetes. Depression levels were measured before and after diabetes diagnosis. Neither DS nor use of ADM increased after diagnosis; higher FPG was associated with greater ADM use in the intensive life style arm; a 10-mg/dl rise in FPG is associated with greater odds of ADM use. Higher FPG and A1C were associated with higher BDI scores in all three arms; A 10-mg/dl rise in FPG had a 0.07 increase in BDI. A 1% higher A1c was associated with a 0.21-point increase in BDI. Normalization of FPG was associated with lower BDI. When FPG had normalized, there was a decrease of 0.30 points in the BDI score compared when FPG had not normalized. Contrary to clinical attributions, diabetes diagnosis did not show an immediate impact on BDI scores or ADM use. Higher glucose levels after diagnosis were associated with a small but significantly higher BDI score and more ADM use. DPPOS: NCT00038727; DPP: NCT00004992.

Primary Author
Marrero,David G.
Ma,Yong
de Groot,Mary
Horton,Edward S.
Price,David W.
Barrett-Connor,Elizabeth
Carnethon,Mercedes R.
Knowler,William C.

Volume
77

Issue
3

Start Page
303

Other Pages
310

Publisher
eScholarship, University of California

URL
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25775165

PMID
25775165

PMCID
PMC4397126



Reference Type
Journal Article

Periodical Full
Psychosomatic medicine

Publication Year
2015

Publication Date
Apr

Place of Publication
United States

ISSN/ISBN
0033-3174

Document Object Index
10.1097/PSY.0000000000000156