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Depressed Dialysis Patients more likely to
be hospitalized or die
Newswise — Dialysis patients
diagnosed with depression are nearly twice
as likely to be hospitalized or die within a
year than those who are not depressed, a UT
Southwestern Medical Center researcher has
found.
In the study, available
online and in the Sept. 15 issue of Kidney
International, researchers monitored 98
dialysis patients for up to 14 months.
More
than a quarter of dialysis patients received
a psychiatric diagnosis of some form of
depression based on a Diagnostic and
Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders 4th
edition (DSM IV).
This is the first reported
link between adverse clinical outcomes in
dialysis patients and depression made
through a formal psychiatric interview based
on the DSM-IV standards.
More than 80 percent of the
depressed patients died or were
hospitalized, compared with 43 percent of
non-depressed patients.
Cardiovascular events, which
previously have been linked to depression,
led to 20 percent of the hospitalizations.
“Twenty percent of patients
who start dialysis will die by the end of
the first year,” said Dr. Susan Hedayati,
assistant professor of internal medicine and
the study’s lead author.
“What we don’t know yet is,
if their depression is treated, could it
extend dialysis patients’ survival and
improve their quality of life.”
Dr. Hedayati, a staff
nephrologist at the Dallas Veterans Affairs
Medical Center, said depression-like
symptoms – such as loss of energy, poor
appetite and sleep disturbances – are often
observed in patients with chronic disease,
so it is important to get a scientifically
valid diagnosis for clinical depression.
Twenty-six million people in
America have chronic kidney disease and more
than 20 million are at increased risk,
according to the National Kidney Foundation.
End-stage renal disease occurs when the
patients’ kidneys have failed to the point
where dialysis or a kidney transplant is
needed.
Dialysis filters toxic
chemicals in the blood and helps control
blood pressure. With hemodialysis, the kind
investigated in this latest study, a filter
functions as an artificial kidney to remove
waste, extra chemicals and fluid from the
body.
Coronary artery disease,
congestive heart failure and diabetes are
known co-morbidities for patients with
end-stage renal disease. In this paper, with
the addition of each co-morbidity, a
dialysis patient was about 30 percent more
likely to be hospitalized or die.
If the patient had
depression, however, the relationship was
even stronger, with about a 100 percent
increase in these dire outcomes, Dr.
Hedayati said.
“Nephrologists don’t have as
much data showing that treating anemia or
increasing the dose of dialysis will improve
survival, and yet during our routine rounds
with dialysis patients we intervene on those
issues,” Dr. Hedayati said.
“Nephrologists don’t usually
ask patients about depression. Since
depression is so prevalent and can
negatively affect dialysis patients, we need
to ask about it.”
Depression is a treatable
disease, so Dr. Hedayati hopes
hospitalizations and deaths can be reduced
with further research.
Other large trials involving
dialysis patients, including some that
evaluated treatment of high cholesterol,
using ACE-inhibitors or increasing the dose
of dialysis, haven’t been shown to make a
significant difference in life expectancy or
hospitalization, Dr. Hedayati said.
“Now that we know depression
in dialysis patients is associated with
adverse outcomes such as death and
hospitalization, we need to take another
step forward and figure out if treating it
will make a difference in patient outcomes,”
Dr. Hedayati said.
Researchers from Duke
University Medical Center, Veterans Affairs
Medical Center in Durham, N.C., and George
Washington University also participated in
the study.
The study was supported by
the Agency for Health Care, Research and
Quality; the John A. Hartford Foundation;
the Claude D. Pepper Older Americans
Independence Center; and the VA.
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