The bidirectional longitudinal association between depressive symptoms and HbA1c : A systematic review and meta-analysis.

Magdalena Beran ORCID logo; Rutendo Muzambi ORCID logo; Anouk Geraets; Juan Rafael Albertorio-Diaz; Marcel C Adriaanse; Marjolein M Iversen; Andrzej Kokoszka; Giesje Nefs ORCID logo; Arie Nouwen ORCID logo; Frans Pouwer ORCID logo; +4 more... Jörg W Huber; Andreas Schmitt ORCID logo; Miranda T Schram; European Depression in Diabetes (EDID) Research Consortium; (2021) The bidirectional longitudinal association between depressive symptoms and HbA1c : A systematic review and meta-analysis. Diabetic Medicine, 39 (2). e14671-. ISSN 0742-3071 DOI: 10.1111/dme.14671
Copy

AIM: To investigate whether there is a bidirectional longitudinal association of depression with HbA1c . METHODS: We conducted a systematic literature search in PubMed, PsycINFO, CINAHL and EMBASE for observational, longitudinal studies published from January 2000 to September 2020, assessing the association between depression and HbA1c in adults. We assessed study quality with the Newcastle-Ottawa-Scale. Pooled effect estimates were reported as partial correlation coefficients (rp ) or odds ratios (OR). RESULTS: We retrieved 1642 studies; 26 studies were included in the systematic review and eleven in the meta-analysis. Most studies (16/26) focused on type 2 diabetes. Study quality was rated as good (n = 19), fair (n = 2) and poor (n = 5). Of the meta-analysed studies, six investigated the longitudinal association between self-reported depressive symptoms and HbA1c and five the reverse longitudinal association, with a combined sample size of n = 48,793 and a mean follow-up of 2 years. Higher levels of baseline depressive symptoms were associated with subsequent higher levels of HbA1c (partial r = 0.07; [95% CI 0.03, 0.12]; I2 38%). Higher baseline HbA1c values were also associated with 18% increased risk of (probable) depression (OR = 1.18; [95% CI 1.12,1.25]; I2 0.0%). CONCLUSIONS: Our findings support a bidirectional longitudinal association between depressive symptoms and HbA1c . However, the observed effect sizes were small and future research in large-scale longitudinal studies is needed to confirm this association. Future studies should investigate the role of type of diabetes and depression, diabetes distress and diabetes self-management behaviours. Our results may have clinical implications, as depressive symptoms and HbA1c levels could be targeted concurrently in the prevention and treatment of diabetes and depression. REGISTRATION: PROSPERO ID CRD42019147551.


picture_as_pdf
Beran_etal_2021-The_bidirectional_longitudinal_association.pdf
subject
Accepted Version
Available under Creative Commons: NC-ND 3.0

View Download

Atom BibTeX OpenURL ContextObject in Span Multiline CSV OpenURL ContextObject Dublin Core Dublin Core MPEG-21 DIDL EndNote HTML Citation JSON MARC (ASCII) MARC (ISO 2709) METS MODS RDF+N3 RDF+N-Triples RDF+XML RIOXX2 XML Reference Manager Refer Simple Metadata ASCII Citation EP3 XML
Export

Downloads