Depression increases risk for cardiovascular disease more than genetics or environment
A history of major depression increases the risk of heart
disease over and above any genetic risks common to depression and heart disease,
according to researchers at Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis
and the VA. The findings were reported at the annual meeting of the American Psychosomatic
Society in Chicago.
The researchers analyzed data gathered from more than
1,200 male twins who served in the U.S. military during the Vietnam War. The men
were surveyed on a variety of health issues in 1992, including depression, and
were assessed again in 2005.
In the study, investigators looked at the onset of heart
disease in depressed study participants between 1993 and 2005. Men with depression
in 1992 were twice as likely to develop heart disease in the ensuing years, compared
to men with no history of depression.
"Based on our findings, we can say that after adjusting
for other risk factors, depression remains a significant predictor of heart disease,"
says first author Jeffrey F. Scherrer, Ph.D., research assistant professor of
psychiatry at Washington University School of Medicine and the St. Louis Veterans
Affairs Medical Center. "In this study, we have demonstrated that exposure
to depression is contributing to heart disease only in twins who have high genetic
risk and who actually develop clinical depression. In twins with high genetic
risk common to depression and heart disease, but who never develop depression
itself, there was no increased risk for heart disease. The findings strongly suggest
that depression itself independently contributes to risk for heart disease."
The investigators were looking for evidence of what they
call incident heart disease, an event such as a heart attack, heart surgery, stent
placement or medical treatment for angina. Those who had evidence of heart disease
prior to the original survey in 1992 were excluded from this study.
Because twins were studied, the researchers could divide
participants into risk groups: twins with high genetic and environmental risk
for depression, those with moderate risk and those with a low risk. The risk groups
then were compared for incident heart disease adjusting for other influences on
heart disease such as smoking, obesity, hypertension and diabetes.
"By separating the twins into these groups based
on their genetic and environmental risks, we are able differentiate the genetic
risks common to depression and heart disease and the risks for heart disease from
exposure to depression," says co-investigator Hong Xian, Ph.D., associate
professor of mathematics in medicine at Washington University and health science
specialist at the VA.
Twins automatically are matched by age. They normally
grow up in the same family environment, and in the case of identical twins, they
share identical DNA.
"If one twin has depression, but his twin brother
does not, both twins will share genetic vulnerability for depression, but it turns
out the twin who was not depressed has less risk for heart disease," says
Scherrer. "In sum, depression itself remains a significant contributor to
incident heart disease after controlling for genes, environment and mental and
physical risk factors."
Scherrer and Xian plan to follow these twins as they
age. They also plan to study the effects of successful depression treatment on
heart disease risk.
This research was supported by grants from the National
Institute of Health and the Veterans Administration.
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