Aging Clinical and Experimental Research | 2019

Depressive symptoms are associated with incident frailty in a Chinese population: the Rugao Longevity and Aging Study

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

Abstract


This study aimed at investigating whether depression symptoms are associated with prevalent and incident physical frailty in Chinese older population. We analyzed data of 1168 older Chinese adults aged 70 and above in the aging arm of the Rugao Longevity and Aging Study (RuLAS). Depressive symptoms (Geriatric Depression Scale\u2009≥\u20096) were assessed by the Geriatric Depression Scale. Frailty was defined using Fried phenotype criteria at baseline and 3-year survey. At baseline, 8.9% of the participants had depression symptoms. The prevalence of pre-frailty and frailty were 34.5% and 5.9%, respectively. The percentages of depressive symptoms increase from robust (5.3%) to pre-frail (11.2%), and then to frail (31.9%) groups. After adjustments of multiple covariates, depressive symptoms were associated with both prevalent pre-frailty (OR\u2009=\u20091.75, 95% CI 1.08–2.84) and prevalent frailty (OR\u2009=\u20095.64, 95% CI 2.85–11.14) at baseline. At 3-year survey, 9.3% participants reported the development of frailty. After multiple adjustments, depressive symptoms were associated with a 2.79-fold (95% CI 1.09–7.10) increased risk of 3-year incident frailty. Depressive symptoms are associated with prevalent and incident frailty in Chinese older population. Together with the observations of the European populations, depressive symptoms may be a candidate risk factor of frailty.

Volume 32
Pages 2297 - 2302
DOI 10.1007/s40520-019-01409-x
Language English
Journal Aging Clinical and Experimental Research

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