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Association of coexistence of frailty and depressive symptoms with mortality in community-dwelling older adults: Kashiwa Cohort Study

Shota Hamada, Yui Sasaki, Bo‐Kyung Son, Tomoki Tanaka, Weida Lyu, Rumiko Tsuchiya‐Ito, Satomi Kitamura, Alex Dregan, Matthew Hotopf, Masao Iwagami, Katsuya Iijima

2023Archives of Gerontology and Geriatrics12 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: This study aimed to determine the longitudinal associations of the coexistence of frailty and depressive symptoms with mortality among older adults. METHODS: The study participants were community-dwelling older adults aged ≥65 years who participated in the baseline survey of the Kashiwa Cohort Study in Japan in 2012. We used Fried's frailty phenotype criteria to classify participants as non-frail (score = 0), pre-frail (1 or 2), or frail (≥3). Depressive symptoms were assessed using the GDS-15 (≥6 points). Cox proportional hazards models were used to evaluate the association of co-occurring frailty and depressive symptoms with all-cause mortality, after adjusting for sociodemographic and clinical characteristics. RESULTS: The study included 1920 participants, including 810 non-frail, 921 pre-frail, and 189 frail older adults, of which 9.0 %, 15.7 %, and 36.0 %, respectively, had depressive symptoms. Ninety-one (4.7 %) participants died during the average follow-up period of 4.8 years. Compared with non-frail participants without depressive symptoms, frail participants had greater adjusted hazard ratios for mortality: 2.47 (95 % CI, 1.16 to 5.25) for frail participants without depressive symptoms and 4.34 (95 % CI, 1.95 to 9.65) for frail participants with depressive symptoms. However, no statistically significant associations were observed in non-frail or pre-frail participants irrespective of depressive symptoms. CONCLUSION: Frail older adults with depressive symptoms have a substantially greater risk of mortality. Screening for depressive symptoms and frailty in older adults should be incorporated into health checkups and clinical practice to identify high-risk populations.

Topics & Concepts

Hazard ratioMedicineDepressive symptomsCohortCohort studyDepression (economics)Proportional hazards modelGerontologyLongitudinal studyPsychiatryConfidence intervalInternal medicineCognitionEconomicsMacroeconomicsPathologyFrailty in Older AdultsChronic Disease Management StrategiesHealth disparities and outcomes