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- Title
Chinese patients with major depression: Do concomitant pain symptoms affect quality of life independently of severity of depression?
- Authors
Novick, Diego; Montgomery, William; Moneta, Maria Victoria; Peng, Xiaomei; Brugnoli, Roberto; Haro, Josep Maria
- Abstract
Objective.This study investigated whether painful physical symptoms (PPSs) influenced quality of life (QoL) when adjusting for severity of depression.Methods.Severity of depression, QoL and PPSs were assessed at baseline and 3 months among the Chinese cohort (n =300) of a 3-month observational study of major depressive disorder (MDD) in East Asia. The presence of PPS was defined as ‘a mean score of ≥2 on the Somatic Symptom Inventory pain-related items’. Regression analyses determined predictors of QoL at 3 months, adjusting for age, sex, depressive symptoms, overall severity and QoL at baseline.Results.PPSs were present (PPS+) at baseline in 35.3% of patients. Over 3 months, in the whole sample, EuroQoL visual analogue scale (EQ-VAS) score improved from 45.5 (standard deviation [SD]: 20.9) to 81 (SD: 16.7), and EuroQoL 5-Dimension Questionnaire (EQ-5D) score improved from 0.52 (SD: 0.31) to 0.89 (0.16). At 3 months, mean EQ-VAS was 75.9 (SD: 17.7) for PPS+versus83.7 (SD: 15.6) for PPS−, and mean EQ-5D was 0.83 (SD: 0.17)versus0.92 (SD: 0.14). PPS+ at baseline was a significant predictor of QoL at 3 months after adjusting for socio-demographic and baseline clinical variables.Conclusions.PPSs were associated with less improvement in QoL in patients receiving treatment for MDD, independent of severity of depression.
- Subjects
CHINA; PAIN & psychology; CHINESE people; PSYCHOLOGY; CONFIDENCE intervals; MENTAL depression; HEALTH surveys; LONGITUDINAL method; SCIENTIFIC observation; PAIN; PROBABILITY theory; PSYCHOLOGICAL tests; QUALITY of life; QUESTIONNAIRES; RESEARCH funding; STATISTICS; MULTIPLE regression analysis; VISUAL analog scale; SEVERITY of illness index; DATA analysis software; DESCRIPTIVE statistics
- Publication
International Journal of Psychiatry in Clinical Practice, 2015, Vol 19, Issue 3, p174
- ISSN
1365-1501
- Publication type
Academic Journal
- DOI
10.3109/13651501.2015.1031681