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Levels of anxiety and depression as predictors of mortality: the HUNT study

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Arnstein Mykletun*
Affiliation:
Research Centre for Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway, and Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK and Norwegian Institute of Public Health, Division of Mental Health, Oslo, Norway
Ottar Bjerkeset
Affiliation:
Department of Research and Development, Levanger Hospital, Norway, and Department of Neuroscience, Unit for Psychiatry and Behavioral Science, Faculty of Medicine, National University of Science and Technology, Trondheim, Norway
Simon øverland
Affiliation:
Research Centre for Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Norway
Martin Prince
Affiliation:
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK
Michael Dewey
Affiliation:
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK
Robert Stewart
Affiliation:
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK
*
Arnstein Mykletun, Mental Health Epidemiology, Research Centre of Health Promotion, Faculty of Psychology, University of Bergen, Christiesgt 13 N-5015 Bergen, Norway. Email: Arnstein.Mykletun@uib.no
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Abstract

Background

Depression is reported to be associated with increased mortality, although underlying mechanisms are uncertain. Associations between anxiety and mortality are also uncertain.

Aims

To investigate associations between individual and combined anxiety/depression symptom loads (using the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS)) and mortality over a 3–6 year period.

Method

We utilised a unique link between a large population survey (HUNT–2, n = 61 349) and a comprehensive mortality database.

Results

Case-level depression was associated with increased mortality (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.52, 95% CI 1.35–1.72) comparable with that of smoking (HR = 1.59, 95% CI 1.44–1.75), and which was only partly explained by somatic symptoms/conditions. Anxiety comorbid with depression lowered mortality compared with depression alone (anxiety depression interaction P = 0.017). The association between anxiety symptom load and mortality was U-shaped.

Conclusions

Depression as a risk factor for mortality was comparable in strength to smoking. Comorbid anxiety reduced mortality compared with depression alone. The relationship between anxiety symptoms and mortality was more complex with a U-shape and highest mortality in those with the lowest anxiety symptom loads.

Type
Papers
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2009 

Depression is repeatedly reported to increase mortality, Reference Cuijpers and Schoevers1,Reference Gallo, Bogner, Morales, Post, Lin and Bruce2 but the strength of this association and the issue of residual confounding (e.g. by lifestyle factors and physical disease) remain controversial. Reference Cole3,Reference Saz and Dewey4 Even less is known about how anxiety affects mortality, with reports of both positive and negative effects. Reference Herrmann, Brand-Driehorst, Buss and Ruger5,Reference Holwerda, Schoevers, Dekker, Deeg, Jonker and Beekman6 We have previously found that depression is associated both with cardiovascular and other-cause mortality to a similar extent. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 Employing the same record linkage between a large population health survey and a national mortality registry, we sought to expand this analysis by: comparing case-level anxiety, depression and comorbid anxiety and depression as predictors; investigating the underlying shape of the associations with individual symptom counts; and investigating the role of potential mediating, confounding and modifying factors.

Method

Study design and end-point (mortality)

Nord-Trøndelag County is one of 19 in Norway, and is broadly representative of the national population, although slightly less urban and with lower educational attainment. The HUNT–2 study was carried out from August 1995 until June 1997. Inhabitants (n = 93 138) in Nord-Trøndelag County aged >19 years (mean age 48.8 years, s.d. = 16.7) received a mailed questionnaire and invitation to a clinical examination, and 61 349 individuals (66%) provided sufficient data for this analysis. Non-responders were heterogeneous but did, on average, have poorer health than participants. Reference Holmen, Midthjell, Krüger, Langhammer, Holmen and Bratberg8

Baseline data were obtained from the Health Study of Nord-Trøndelag County (HUNT–2), and have been used for one previous study of mortality in relation to anxiety and depression in the general population. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 A subsample defined by the upper one percentile on the Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) Reference Zigmond and Snaith9 total score was the target of an intervention in the form of letters advising the individual and his/her general practitioner to consider treatment for the high symptom score, Reference Bjerkeset, Dahl, Stordal, Dahl, Kruger and Linaker10 and the mortality in this subgroup has been described elsewhere. Reference Bjerkeset, Mykletun, Dahl and Linaker11

Data on mortality was obtained from the National Mortality Registry from date of attendance until December 2000 with a mean follow-up of 4.4 years (s.d. = 0.68). This is a relatively short follow-up, but combined with a large sample size, the study is generously powered.

Exposures: anxiety and depressive symptoms

The HADS is a self-report questionnaire comprising 14 four-point Likert-scaled items covering anxiety (HADS–A) and depression (HADS–D) over the past 2 weeks. Reference Zigmond and Snaith9 It was specifically designed to avoid false-positive cases when administered in general hospital settings and so contains no items on somatic symptoms or sleep or appetite disturbance, focusing instead on the psychological and cognitive symptoms. Symptoms of anhedonia are central to the depression subscale, whereas the symptoms assessed by the anxiety subscale are mostly related to generalised anxiety, with a focus on feelings of being tense and being frightened, of worrying thoughts, restlessness and one item on panic. Reference Mykletun, Stordal and Dahl12 A cut-off score of 8 on each subscale has been found to screen adequately (sensitivity and specificity both about 0.80) for case-level depression and anxiety according to DSM–III 13 /IV 14 and ICD–8 15 /9 16 diagnostic criteria. Reference Bjelland, Dahl, Haug and Neckelmann17 Principal components analysis has indicated good discrimination between the two subscales in this sample. Reference Mykletun, Stordal and Dahl12 Employing these cut-offs, four groups were identified for the analysis presented here: case-level anxiety only, case-level depression only, case-level comorbid anxiety and depression, and a reference group scoring below case-level on both scales. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 Anxiety and depression scale scores were also encoded in quartiles, as continuous measures, with multiple cut-offs within the clinical range, and as quadratic terms.

Confounding factors

Potential confounding and mediating factors were operationalised in accordance with our previous publication on associations between mental disorder and cause-specific mortality. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 Because of the cross-sectional nature of the baseline survey, no attempt was made to distinguish confounding and mediating (causal pathway) factors in the analysis.

Physical health was assessed by self-report by ‘ticking boxes’ for somatic diagnoses and somatic symptoms: a sum of somatic diagnoses comprising angina pectoris, asthma, cancer, diabetes, epilepsy, hypertension, myocardial infarction, musculoskeletal diseases, respiratory disease, stroke and thyroid diseases was computed. Based on the un-standardised regression coefficients from logistic regression models, each of these diagnoses were weighted according to the strength of their association with mortality to better capture differential severity of the various symptoms and diagnoses and provide a more accurate covariate for the analysis in question. Diagnoses negatively associated with mortality (hypothyroid disease, goitre, fibromyalgia, osteoarthritis and ankylosing spondylitis) were omitted. (These negative associations were not hypothesised, might be confounded and might be the subject of investigation in future studies.)

Similarly, a mortality-weighted index for somatic symptoms was computed as the number of organ systems for which symptoms were reported, comprising gastrointestinal (four questions on nausea, heartburn, diarrhoea and constipation), sensation (two questions on hearing and sight), heart (one question on palpitations) and respiratory function (one on respiratory problems). Musculoskeletal symptoms (11 body areas) and headaches (two items) were negatively associated with mortality and were not included in the index.

An ordinal index of physical impairment was computed from four questions on self-evaluated moderate or severe impairments from somatic disease, reduced locomotivity, hearing and sight.

Self-rated health-related behaviours included in the analysis were: smoking (current, former and never smoker), Reference Mykletun, Overland, Aaro, Liabø and Stewart18 physical activity (three levels), and CAGE Reference Aertgeerts19 caseness for alcohol problems. Reference Aertgeerts20 The two latter variables were obtained from a separate questionnaire with an about 20% lower response rate; missing responses were encoded as a separate category.

Educational level was coded according to compulsory, secondary and university level. Reference Roness, Mykletun and Dahl21 Socioeconomic status was measured according to the Erikson–Goldthorpe–Portocareros scheme, which is based on occupational information. Reference Krokstad and Westin22

Physical measures of body mass index (BMI), resting systolic and diastolic blood pressure Reference Hildrum, Mykletun, Stordal, Bjelland, Dahl and Holmen23 and non-fasting total cholesterol were obtained by a specially trained nurse during the screening, and all these variables were encoded in quartiles as analyses of these variables' associations with mortality indicated non-linear associations.

Statistical analysis

Logistic regression models were used to quantify associations between anxiety, depression and mortality, for investigation of confounding/mediating factors, and for testing interaction terms. All associations reported were statistically significant (P<0.05) using two-tailed tests, unless otherwise stated. All models were adjusted for age (encoded categorically in decades) and gender. All covariates were entered as categorical variables, with the exception of those for the somatic symptom scale, which were encoded as a continuous variable. Results are presented as odds ratios (OR) with 95% CI. Individuals still alive at end of follow-up comprised a common reference category. The proportional hazards assumption was not violated in any analysis (exposures' effects on outcome did not vary with time), and the same conclusions were reached applying Cox regression analysis, and illustrated with survival plots. For the purpose of comparison of effect sizes, survival plots were produced also for daily smoking. The association between the exposures and mortality was also described in terms of population attributable fractions to illustrate the proportion of incident cases in the population that would have been prevented if a causal exposure were removed, assuming an unconfounded causal association. Reference Weich, Prince, Prince, Stewart, Ford and Hotopf24

Ethics

HUNT–2 was approved by the National Data Inspectorate and the Board of Research Ethics in Health Region IV of Norway.

Results

Population characteristics

The participation rate in the HUNT–2 study was 66%. Nonparticipants were older, more likely to be institutionalised or in hospitals and the mortality rate during follow-up in non-participants was higher than in participants (15% v. 4%). The following results are based on 2309 deaths among 61 349 participants with valid data.

Mortality was associated with increasing age and male gender. Adjusted for age and gender, mortality was significantly associated with physical impairment, low physical activity, smoking, alcohol problems as elicited on the CAGE questionnaire, increased numbers of somatic diagnoses and symptoms, lower educational level and lower socioeconomic status scores. Blood pressure, total cholesterol level and BMI were associated with mortality, with highest mortality in the lowest quartile of all these variables (data not shown).

Associations between case-level anxiety/depression and mortality

Adjusted for age and gender only, depression caseness alone was more strongly associated with mortality (OR = 1.68) than anxiety caseness (OR = 1.19) or comorbid anxiety/depression (OR = 1.44). The interaction term between case-level anxiety and case-level depression was significant and negative (step chi-squared test P = 0.017 by adding the interaction term to a model comprising anxiety, depression, age and gender), reflecting the lower risk in the comorbid group than anticipated from the individual odds ratios. Cox regression models showing the same are presented in Fig. 1.

Fig. 1 Cox regression models for (a) anxiety only, depression only or both as risk factors for mortality and (b) comparision with current daily smoking. Both survival curves based on fully adjusted models. HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.

To illustrate the strength of the association of depression and mortality, we compared it to that of smoking (Fig. 1). Adjusted for age and gender only, the association between depression alone and mortality (hazard ratio (HR) = 1.52, 95% CI 1.35–1.72) was comparable with that of current smoking (HR = 1.59, 95% CI 1.44–1.75), compared with former and never smokers combined. Fully adjusted, the difference was somewhat stronger in smoking (HR = 1.42, 95% CI 1.29–1.58) compared with depression (HR = 1.27, 95% CI 1.12–1.43), but confidence intervals were overlapping.

The effects of separate and cumulative adjustments for covariates on the associations of anxiety and depression with mortality are displayed in Table 1 in the order of apparent influence. Strongest attenuation of the associations of interest was found by adjusting for somatic symptoms and diagnoses (accounting for most of the mortality association with anxiety (OR = 1.04, 95% CI 0.86–1.24) and about one-fifth of the association with depression (OR = 1.53, 95% CI 1.33–1.76)). Self-reported diagnoses accounted for far more of this attenuation than did somatic symptoms. Reported physical impairment was the second strongest covariate, followed by physical activity. Adjustment for smoking and alcohol problems, educational level and socioeconomic status, BMI, diastolic blood pressure and cholesterol level had only marginal effects on the associations of interest. Adjustment for all the above-mentioned factors simultaneously entirely accounted for the associations of anxiety alone (OR = 0.95, 95% CI 0.79–1.14) and comorbid anxiety/depression

Table 1 Mortality as a function of anxiety and depression with adjustment for potential confounding and mediating factors (odds ratios from logistic regression analyses)

Cumulative adjustments Adjustments entered separately a
Anxiety n = 5864 (9.6%) whereof n = 162 died Depression n = 3032 (4.9%) whereof n = 331 died Both n = 3640 (5.9%) whereof n = 190 died Anxiety n = 5864 (9.6%) whereof n = 162 died Depression n = 3032 (4.9%) whereof n = 331 died Both n = 3640 (5.9%) whereof n = 190 died
OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI) OR (95% CI)
Age and gender 1.19 (1.00–1.42) 1.68 (1.46–1.92) 1.44 (1.22–1.70) 1.19 (1.00–1.42) 1.68 (1.46–1.92) 1.44 (1.22–1.70)
Somatic symptoms and diagnoses 1.04 (0.86–1.24) 1.53 (1.33–1.76) 1.21 (1.02–1.44) 1.04 (0.86–1.24) 1.53 (1.33–1.76) 1.21 (1.02–1.44)
Physical impairment 1.00 (0.83–1.20) 1.46 (1.27–1.68) 1.14 (0.96–1.35) 1.09 (0.91–1.30) 1.53 (1.33–1.75) 1.25 (1.06–1.49)
Physical activity 1.00 (0.83–1.19) 1.41 (1.22–1.62) 1.10 (0.92–1.30) 1.18 (0.99–1.40) 1.58 (1.38–1.82) 1.35 (1.14–1.60)
Smoking, alcohol, physical activity 0.97 (0.81–1.67) 1.40 (1.21–1.61) 1.05 (0.88–1.25) 1.16 (0.97–1.38) 1.66 (1.44–1.90) 1.37 (1.16–1.62)
Educational level and SES 0.97 (0.81–1.16) 1.38 (1.20–1.59) 1.04 (0.87–1.24) 1.17 (0.99–1.40) 1.64 (1.43–1.88) 1.40 (1.18–1.65)
Physical measures b 0.95 (0.79–1.14) 1.37 (1.19–1.58) 1.02 (0.86–1.22) 1.17 (0.98–1.40) 1.67 (1.45–1.91) 1.42 (1.20–1.68)
Adjustment for all factors above 0.95 (0.79–1.14) 1.37 (1.19–1.58) 1.02 (0.86–1.22) 0.95 (0.79–1.14) 1.37 (1.19–1.58) 1.02 (0.86–1.22)

SES, socioeconomic status

a. All models are adjusted for age (categorically in decades) and gender

b. Body mass index, diastolic blood pressure and total cholesterol level

(OR = 1.02, 95% CI 0.86–1.22) with mortality, but a substantial proportion of the association between depression alone and mortality remained unexplained (OR = 1.37, 95% CI 1.19–1.58).

The association between anxiety and mortality was U-shaped, with increased mortality in both the lowest and highest quartiles of the distribution compared with the third quartile (Table 2, column 1). The population attributable fraction for low anxiety levels (first quartile n = 22 112) was 0.077 in the fully adjusted model based on the entire sample.

Table 2 Mortality as a function of anxiety (encoded in quartiles), stratified for case-level depression. Results from logistic regression analyses (odds ratios) a

Entire sample (n = 61 349) Excluding case-level depression (n = 54 677) Including only case-level depression (n = 6672)
Adjusted for age and gender
   HADS–A score 0–2 (n = 22 112 whereof n = 1040 died) 1.14 * 1.35 * 1.17
   HADS–A score 3–4 (n = 14,752 whereof n = 460 died) 1.02 1.20 * 0.78
   HADS–A score 5–6 (n = 10 983 whereof n = 328 died) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref)
   HADS–A score 7–21 (n = 13 502 whereof n = 481 died) 1.25 * 1.38 * 0.75 *
   Model significance, b P 0.007 <0.001 0.007
   Significance (linear), c P 0.043 (+) 0.273 (–) 0.239 (–)
   Significance (quadratic), d P <0.001 0.010 <0.001
Fully adjusted e
   HADS–A score 0–2 (n = 22 112 whereof n = 1040 died) 1.27 * 1.48 * 1.14
   HADS–A score 3–4 (n = 14 752 whereof n = 460 died) 1.07 1.26 * 0.80
   HADS–A score 5–6 (n = 10 983 whereof n = 328 died) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref)
   HADS–A score 7–21 (n = 13 502 whereof n = 481 died) 1.07 1.23 * 0.66 *
   Model significance, b P 0.001 <0.001 0.001
   Significance (linear), c P 0.009 (–) <0.001 (–) 0.010 (–)
   Significance (quadratic), d P 0.001 0.057 0.009

HADS–A, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, anxiety items; ref, reference data

a. Linear models are indicated (+) for positive effects and (-) for negative effects

b. Step chi-squared significance by adding anxiety (encoded in quartiles) to the other variables in the model

c. Step chi-squared significance by adding anxiety (encoded as a continuous variable) to the other variables in the model (not including the quadratic term for scale score anxiety)

d. Step chi-squared significance by adding the quadratic anxiety term (continuous variable) to all other variables, including anxiety (also included as a continuous variable)

e. Adjusted for all factors reported in Table 1

* P<0.05

This non-monotonic association was statistically significant as tested by adding a quadratic anxiety term to a regression model containing anxiety (continuous variable) and other variables as specified in Table 3. The findings were robust for all adjustments. Testing for monotonic trends in the association between anxiety and mortality (anxiety encoded as a continuous variable) revealed a negative association in the fully adjusted models regardless of comorbid depression. These findings (U-shape and negative monotonic trends) were attenuated, but remained significant in those with depression (Table 2, columns 2 and 3).

Table 3 Mortality as a function of depression (encoded in quartiles), stratified for case-level anxiety. Results from logistic regression analyses (odds ratios) a

Entire sample (n = 61 349) Excluding case-level anxiety (n = 51 845) Including only case-level anxiety (n = 9504)
Adjusted for age and gender
   HADS–D score 0–2 (n = 19 848 whereof n = 458 died) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref)
   HADS–D score 2–3 (n = 16 610 whereof n = 477 died) 1.00 0.97 3.66 *
   HADS–D score 4–5 (n = 11,016 whereof n = 460 died) 1.14 1.11 3.31 *
   HADS–D score 6–21 (n = 13 875 whereof n = 914 died) 1.51 * 1.47 * 4.22 *
   Model significance, b P <0.001 <0.001 0.013
   Significance (linear), c P <0.001 (+) <0.001 (+) 0.002 (+)
Fully adjusted d
   HADS–D score 0–1 (n = 19 848 whereof n = 458 died) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref) 1.00 (ref)
   HADS–D score 2–3 (n = 16 610 whereof n = 477 died) 0.95 0.92 3.54 *
   HADS–D score 4–5 (n = 11 016 whereof n = 460 died) 1.03 1.02 3.30
   HADS–D score 6–21 (n = 13 875 whereof n = 914 died) 1.21 * 1.23 * 4.12 *
   Model significance, b P 0.001 <0.001 0.025
   Significance (linear), c P <0.001 (+) <0.001 (+) 0.023 (+)

HADS–D, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale, depression items; ref, reference data

a. Linear models are indicated (+) for positive effects and (-) for negative effects

b. Step chi-squared significance by adding depression (encoded in quartiles) to the other variables in the model

c. Step chi-squared significance by adding depression (encoded as a continuous variable) to the other variables in the model

d. Adjusted for all factors reported in Table 1

* P<0.05

With respect to depressive symptoms, the association with mortality was only apparent for the fourth quartile of scale scores, giving rise to significant positive linear and quadratic terms in fully adjusted models (Table 3, column 1). These findings were also robust when stratified by case-level anxiety (Table 3, columns 2 and 3). With scale scores of 0–7 as a reference group, a dose–response association was found for the depression mortality association (Table 4) (scale score 8–10 (n = 332), OR = 1.27, 95% CI 1.10–1.46); scale score 11–14 (n = 157), OR = 1.43, 95% CI 1.16–1.75; and scale score 15–21 (n = 32), OR = 1.71, 95% CI 1.08–2.71, in fully adjusted models, also adjusted for anxiety scale score). No similar significant dose–response pattern was found for anxiety when adjusted for age, gender and depression (Table 4).

Table 4 Dose–response association between anxiety and depression and mortality

Score n Dead, n OR (95% CI), adjusted for age and gender OR (95% CI), adjusted for the other subscale (anxiety or depression) OR (95% CI), adjusted for somatic symptoms and diagnoses OR (95% CI), fully adjusted model
Depression
   Normal 0–7 54677 1788 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference)
   Mild 8–10 4647 332 1.43 (1.26–1.63) 1.43 (1.24–1.64) 1.35 (1.17–1.55) 1.27 (1.10–1.46)
   Moderate 11–14 1753 157 1.75 (1.45–2.11) 1.70 (1.39–2.08) 1.55 (1.26–1.90) 1.43 (1.16–1.75)
   Severe 15–21 272 32 2.49 (1.63–3.79) 2.29 (1.48–3.56) 1.96 (1.24–3.10) 1.71 (1.08–2.71)
   Significance a <0.001 <0.001 <0.001 <0.001
Anxiety
   Normal 0–7 51845 1957 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference) 1.00 (reference)
   Mild 8–10 6062 211 1.10 (0.94–1.28) 0.96 (0.81–1.12) 0.88 (0.74–1.04) 0.83 (0.70–0.98)
   Moderate 11–14 2821 111 1.40 (1.14–1.73) 1.07 (0.85–1.34) 0.92 (0.73–1.16) 0.84 (0.67–1.06)
   Severe 15–21 621 30 1.97 (1.32–2.96) 1.32 (0.87–2.02) 1.10 (0.71–1.70) 0.96 (0.62–1.49)
   Significance a <0.001 <0.453 <0.375 b <0.059 b

a. Trend test for significance of anxiety or depression upon mortality

b. Negative trend, that is, anxiety is a protective factor against mortality

Effect modification by age, gender and somatic symptoms or diagnoses

The effect of case-level anxiety and depression on mortality was equal in men and women (Table 5). Age moderated the effect of comorbid anxiety and depression on mortality (P = 0.017), effects being stronger in younger than older cohorts. A similar, but not statistically significant, tendency was found for anxiety and depression alone (Table 5). There were no statistically significant interactions between case-level anxiety/depression and level of somatic symptoms or diagnoses (data not shown).

Table 5 Mortality as a function of anxiety and depression, adjusted for age (continuous variable) and gender. Stratified analyses for age and gender

Anxiety only Depression only Both
Age, years: OR (95% CI)
   20–65 1.27 (0.94–1.72) 1.79 (1.31–2.45) 1.91 (1.43–2.55)
   >65 1.16 (0.93–1.45) 1.59 (1.36–1.86) 1.22 (0.99–1.50)
   Significance of interaction by age a 0.427 0.779 0.017
Gender, OR (95% CI)
   Men 1.34 (1.03–1.76) 1.58 (1.33–1.88) 1.39 (1.09–1.77)
   Women 1.15 (0.90–1.45) 1.66 (1.33–2.08) 1.45 (1.15–1.83)
   Significance of interaction by gender b 0.364 0.654 0.794

a. Step chi-squared significance (d.f. = 1) by adding the interaction term age (continuous z-scored variable) by anxiety/depression/both to a previous block containing these separately plus gender

b. Step chi-squared significance (d.f. = 1) by adding the interaction term gender by anxiety/depression/both to a previous block containing these separately plus age (continuous variable)

Discussion

Summary of results

We found that case-level depression was a risk factor for mortality, robust for adjustment by a number of potential confounding or mediating factors, including somatic symptoms and diagnoses, physical impairment, physical activity, smoking, alcohol problems, educational level and socioeconomic status, blood pressure, cholesterol level and BMI (OR = 1.37, 95% CI 1.19–1.58). The association with anxiety scale scores was U-shaped. Adjusted for physical health, we found no association between case-level anxiety and mortality (OR = 1.00). When comorbid with case-level depression, case-level anxiety was associated with a reduction in mortality. The association between comorbid anxiety and depression and mortality was equal in men and women, but significantly stronger in younger than older participants.

Strengths and limitations

The present study has several design strengths. The sample was large and comprehensively evaluated and the participation rate was reasonable considering the scale of the study. Ascertainment of mortality was complete (with the exception of emigration from the country) and ascertainment itself unlikely to have been influenced by exposure status.

There are some limitations to our study. Non-responders had on average poorer health than participants, reflected in higher mortality. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 Anxiety and depression at baseline were established using relatively brief screening instruments rather than clinical diagnosis, and with reference to the past 2 weeks only. Misclassification is likely to have been random; most likely resulting in an underestimate of the observed association. Since screening for psychiatric morbidity was limited to symptoms of anxiety and depression (and CAGE for alcohol problems) we cannot estimate the influence of other mental disorders nor rule out possible confounding by comorbidity.

As a result of the cross-sectional design, it is not possible to determine the temporal relationship between somatic health states and anxiety/depression. To the extent that mental disorders increase somatic conditions such as coronary heart disease, Reference Carney and Sheps25 we might be adjusting for mediating factors, causing underestimation of true effect sizes. On the other hand, we cannot rule out residual confounding from inadequately measured somatic illness causing common mental disorder. However, neither of the two are likely to explain the U-shaped association of anxiety with mortality.

Another limitation arises from the complex interrelationship between mental and somatic disorders and symptoms. Diagnostic criteria partly overlap between somatic illness and common mental disorder. We attempted to minimise this problem by employing the HADS (which includes no somatic symptoms of anxiety/depression) and then adjusting for somatic symptoms. This approach may miss ‘masked depression’, leading to underestimation of true effect sizes. The weighting procedure for physical conditions and symptoms sought to minimise the problem of residual confounding from somatic illness, but may have resulted in overadjustment of models and thus underestimation of the associations of interest. Residual confounding may have resulted from physical conditions not included in the lists, or from measurement error through underreporting of past or present illness. Another HUNT study analysis, for example, estimated 29% underreporting of cancer. Underreporting, however, principally occurred in less severe conditions (e.g. underreporting for basal cell carcinoma 69% v. 3% for breast cancer). We believe that this is most likely to have obscured rather than exaggerated the associations of interest. Finally, it is possible that cognitive impairments occurring in depression Reference Biringer, Mykletun, Dahl, Smith, Engedal and Nygaard26 might increase underreporting in this group.

The fully adjusted models include variables for health-related behaviour and self-evaluated impairment, which all may form part of the expression of mental disorder, adding to the problem of overadjustment. However, the apparent influence of these ‘lifestyle’ covariates was relatively small on the associations of interest. The intervention aimed at the upper percentile of HADS total scores is unlikely to have had major effects, Reference Zigmond and Snaith9 but could in theory have deflated observed effect sizes.

How strong is the association between depression and mortality?

Previous research has been criticised because studies have not always fully accounted for relevant confounders. Reference Cole3,Reference Saz and Dewey4 In this analysis, we included an extensive list of physical symptoms and disorders, weighted for their associations with mortality in this sample. Despite the risk of ‘overadjustment’, these covariates still accounted for less than a quarter of the association between depression and mortality. The inclusion of physical impairment, health-related behaviour, socioeconomic factors and physical measures in regression models further attenuated this association but, in the fully adjusted model, it remained highly significant and of reasonable strength. Our estimate of the association between depression and mortality is, adjusted for age and gender only, comparable with that reported in recent meta-analyses, Reference Barth, Schumacher and Herrmann-Lingen27Reference van Melle, de Jonge, Spijkerman, Tijssen, Ormel and van Veldhuisen29 but weaker after full adjustment for confounding factors. This discrepancy might be a consequence of poor adjustment for relevant confounders in studies included in meta-analyses. On the other hand, the adjustments in the present paper may be overextensive as discussed previously, which might lead us to underestimate the true association. The composition of the HADS and our choice of cut-off may also contribute to a weaker association. The HADS is particularly designed to avoid false positives in the context of comorbid somatic disease, and therefore omitted somatic symptoms of depression and anxiety. Reference Zigmond and Snaith9 To illustrate the strength of the association between depression and mortality, we compared it with the effect of current smoking: an accepted risk factor for mortality and a target for major public health initiatives. The odds ratios for mortality associated with smoking and depression were comparable in the models adjusted for age and gender only, and the association with depression actually exceeded that of smoking in the fully adjusted model. This illustrates the potential importance of depression as a risk factor for mortality – however, causal pathways require further consideration.

Mechanisms underlying the depression–mortality association

The study adds to the present knowledge of mechanisms linking depression with mortality. The strongest attenuation of the association was found following adjustment for somatic symptoms and diagnoses, which supports confounding by physical disease as a partial explanation. Reference Carney, Freedland and Jaffe30 The second strongest attenuation of association was found following adjustment for physical impairment. This might indicate confounding if the depressed state is a reaction to the impairment. Reference Wulsin, Vaillant and Wells31 However, the physical impairment might be an epiphenomenon of depression: if so, part of the attenuation may represent a causal pathway between depression and mortality and inclusion of this variable in the model may contribute to overadjustment, leaving the association with depression underestimated. Physical activity was the third strongest explanatory variable which, conceptually, is more likely to be a mediating than confounding factor and supports a lifestyle hypothesis regarding the causal pathway between depression and mortality. Reference Abas, Hotopf and Prince32 Factors not accounting for the association are also relevant for the consideration of mechanisms. These included smoking, alcohol problems, educational level and socioeconomic status, BMI, diastolic blood pressure and total cholesterol level. This is somewhat surprising as for example smoking and physical activity are factors reported to be associated with both mortality and depression. Mediation via other biological changes secondary to depression cannot be rejected.

Cardiovascular disease mortality in depression

Most of the literature on mortality and depression has focused on cardiovascular disease mortality. Reference Wulsin, Vaillant and Wells31,Reference Lett, Blumenthal, Babyak, Sherwood, Strauman and Robins33 Despite some controversy over the evidence for this association, potential mechanisms have been suggested. Reference Carney, Freedland, Miller and Jaffe34 In a previous analysis of the same dataset, we recently found that depression was no stronger a risk factor for cardiovascular disease mortality than for other causes combined. Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 The analysis described here did not specifically address cardiovascular disease mortality. Despite strong evidence for associations between smoking and depression, Reference Mykletun, Overland, Aaro, Liabø and Stewart18 adjustment for smoking had little impact on the association of interest. Adjustment for blood pressure also did little to the association, which is understandable in light of recent evidence that its relation to depression may be negative. Reference Hildrum, Mykletun, Holmen and Dahl35 Cholesterol level also failed to account for the association.

No gender difference, but stronger mortality association in younger participants

Our finding of no gender difference in the association between depression and mortality contrasts with the previously reported stronger effect in men than in women. Reference Holwerda, Schoevers, Dekker, Deeg, Jonker and Beekman6,Reference Zheng, Macera, Croft, Giles, Davis and Scott36,Reference Schoevers, Geerlings, Beekman, Penninx, Deeg and Jonker37 The stronger effect of depression on mortality in younger individuals than older has not previously been reported, but the same direction of interaction was found for disability pension award as an outcome in this sample. Reference Mykletun, Overland, Dahl, Krokstad, Bjerkeset and Glozier38 Severe somatic conditions such as cancer and cardiovascular diseases increase strongly with age, perhaps decreasing the relative contribution of risk factors of relevance across all age groups.

Anxiety and mortality

The literature on anxiety and mortality is relatively sparse compared with that on depression. Previous studies have reported conflicting findings concerning the association between anxiety levels and mortality, which has been reported as positive, Reference Grasbeck, Rorsman, Hagnell and Isberg39 absent, Reference Holwerda, Schoevers, Dekker, Deeg, Jonker and Beekman6,Reference Lavretsky, Mistry, Bastani, Gould, Gokhman and Huang40,Reference Lane, Carroll, Ring, Beevers and Lip41 and negative. Reference Herrmann, Brand-Driehorst, Buss and Ruger5,Reference Lee, Wadsworth and Hotopf42 Our findings support the last. We speculate that confounding by comorbid depression, and the use of statistical models not allowing non-linear effects, might explain some of the controversy in the literature. Treating the symptom scale as a continuous variable, our findings of a negative association between anxiety symptoms and mortality are consistent with the largest study employing the HADS. Reference Herrmann, Brand-Driehorst, Buss and Ruger5 Furthermore, we found lower mortality in participants with comorbid case-level anxiety and depression compared with those with case-level depression alone. The latter finding is counter-intuitive, since comorbid anxiety and depression are associated with both poorer physical health Reference Stordal, Bjelland, Dahl and Mykletun43 and more disability Reference Mykletun, Overland, Dahl, Krokstad, Bjerkeset and Glozier38 than depression alone. We speculate that low trait anxiety may result in reduced help-seeking and reduced adherence to treatment when somatic illness occurs, Reference Carney, Freedland, Miller and Jaffe34 and perhaps also to more risk behaviour with a corresponding increased risk of accidental deaths in early adulthood. Reference Lee, Wadsworth and Hotopf42 In other words, there may be an evolutionary advantage of moderate levels of anxiety, a hypothesis that requires further evaluation. These findings of differences between anxiety and depression appear to be relatively rare for a given outcome and might be an argument for maintaining the separation of the two ‘disorders’: hence a contribution to the debate on cothymia. Reference Tyrer44 The HADS anxiety scale score is negatively associated with both cardiovascular disease mortality and other causes combined, Reference Mykletun, Bjerkeset, Dewey, Prince, Overland and Stewart7 perhaps precluding hypotheses relating to specific causes of death. Confounding is also unlikely since there was no apparent alteration following adjustment for the large number of covariates available for this analysis.

Beyond case-levels, we found a U-shaped association between overall anxiety symptom load and mortality, with relatively high mortality associated with both low and high levels of symptoms – although most pronounced for low symptoms. In terms of population attributable fractions, the effect of low anxiety (the first quartile compared with the third quartile) appeared to be surprisingly strong compared with case-level depression (population attributable fractions 0.077 v. 0.013), which is a consequence of first quartile anxiety being a seven times more prevalent category than case-level depression. In other words, relatively low levels of anxiety potentially accounted for substantially more mortality than did case-level depression. Further research is required to clarify underlying mechanisms: perhaps specifically to investigate whether modest levels of anxiety promote earlier identification and treatment of potentially life-threatening disease Reference Carney, Freedland, Miller and Jaffe34 and/or decrease risk behaviour associated with non-disease mortality. Reference Lee, Wadsworth and Hotopf42

Funding

R.S. is funded by NIHR Biomedical Research Centre for Mental Health, the South London and Maudsley NHS Trust, and the Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London.

Acknowledgements

Data were obtained from the Norwegian Office for Social Insurance and The Nord-Trøndelag Health Study (The HUNT Study, a collaboration between HUNT Research Centre, Faculty of Medicine, Norwegian University of Science and Technology (NTNU, Verdal), Norwegian Institute of Public Health, and Nord-Trøndelag County Council). Professor Alv A. Dahl is acknowledged for his facilitation in the planning of the study, and Professor Leif Edvard Aarø is acknowledged for careful advice. Arnstein Mykletun holds a career research grant from the Norwegian Research Council.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest

None.

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Figure 0

Fig. 1 Cox regression models for (a) anxiety only, depression only or both as risk factors for mortality and (b) comparision with current daily smoking. Both survival curves based on fully adjusted models. HADS, Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale.

Figure 1

Table 1 Mortality as a function of anxiety and depression with adjustment for potential confounding and mediating factors (odds ratios from logistic regression analyses)

Figure 2

Table 2 Mortality as a function of anxiety (encoded in quartiles), stratified for case-level depression. Results from logistic regression analyses (odds ratios)a

Figure 3

Table 3 Mortality as a function of depression (encoded in quartiles), stratified for case-level anxiety. Results from logistic regression analyses (odds ratios)a

Figure 4

Table 4 Dose–response association between anxiety and depression and mortality

Figure 5

Table 5 Mortality as a function of anxiety and depression, adjusted for age (continuous variable) and gender. Stratified analyses for age and gender

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