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Investigating the relationship between age of onset of depressive disorder and cognitive function

Investigating the relationship between age of onset of depressive disorder and cognitive function
Investigating the relationship between age of onset of depressive disorder and cognitive function
Objectives: depressive disorder is commonly associated with impaired cognitive function; however, it is unclear whether the age of onset of the first episode of depression, current depression severity, or historical severity of depressive episodes are associated with cognitive performance.

Methods: this study examined baseline cross-sectional data from the ongoing online PROTECT study. A total of 7344 participants, 50 years or older, with a history of depression and no diagnosis of dementia were divided into three groups according to age of onset of their first depressive episode: early-onset, midlife-onset, and late-onset. Performance on measures of visuospatial episodic memory, executive function, verbal working, and visual working memory were evaluated. Demographic and clinical characteristics such as age, education, and severity of symptoms during their worst previous depressive episode and current depression severity were included in multivariate regression models.

Results: the late-onset depression group scored significantly lower on the verbal reasoning task than the early-onset group while there were no significant differences found on the other tasks. Midlife-onset depression participants performed better in the visual episodic memory task, but worse on the verbal reasoning task, than early-onset depression participants. Current depression severity was negatively correlated with all four cognitive domains, while historical severity score was found to be significantly associated with cognitive performance on the verbal reasoning and spatial working memory tasks.

Conclusions: the most important indicator of cognitive performance in depression appears to be current, rather than historic depression severity; however, late-onset depression may be associated with more executive impairment than an early-onset depression.
0885-6230
Eraydin, Irem Ece
ae07a51a-3dc7-4cb0-8d9d-9ac7650bea3e
Mueller, Christoph
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Corbett, Anne
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Ballard, Clive
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Brooker, Helen
1e981a24-d4c3-4208-9254-d1d1e09f98e3
Wesnes, Keith
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Aarsland, Dag
0ee40af5-2c07-4280-b990-f8c3a8b6cba2
Huntley, Jonathan
941d0f5a-42f7-4506-88de-ae7c4f34c6f9
Eraydin, Irem Ece
ae07a51a-3dc7-4cb0-8d9d-9ac7650bea3e
Mueller, Christoph
46065008-a3e2-4512-85bd-b2d7218300c2
Corbett, Anne
960d7594-5b09-477a-9f4e-ba3c29807e9a
Ballard, Clive
e244c4e5-5dd4-4c66-9efb-6bf2006bdb7e
Brooker, Helen
1e981a24-d4c3-4208-9254-d1d1e09f98e3
Wesnes, Keith
9ad44193-592f-4f3a-97ab-4d28f154d5c4
Aarsland, Dag
0ee40af5-2c07-4280-b990-f8c3a8b6cba2
Huntley, Jonathan
941d0f5a-42f7-4506-88de-ae7c4f34c6f9

Eraydin, Irem Ece, Mueller, Christoph, Corbett, Anne, Ballard, Clive, Brooker, Helen, Wesnes, Keith, Aarsland, Dag and Huntley, Jonathan (2018) Investigating the relationship between age of onset of depressive disorder and cognitive function. International Journal of Geriatric Psychiatry, 34 (1). (doi:10.1002/gps.4979).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Objectives: depressive disorder is commonly associated with impaired cognitive function; however, it is unclear whether the age of onset of the first episode of depression, current depression severity, or historical severity of depressive episodes are associated with cognitive performance.

Methods: this study examined baseline cross-sectional data from the ongoing online PROTECT study. A total of 7344 participants, 50 years or older, with a history of depression and no diagnosis of dementia were divided into three groups according to age of onset of their first depressive episode: early-onset, midlife-onset, and late-onset. Performance on measures of visuospatial episodic memory, executive function, verbal working, and visual working memory were evaluated. Demographic and clinical characteristics such as age, education, and severity of symptoms during their worst previous depressive episode and current depression severity were included in multivariate regression models.

Results: the late-onset depression group scored significantly lower on the verbal reasoning task than the early-onset group while there were no significant differences found on the other tasks. Midlife-onset depression participants performed better in the visual episodic memory task, but worse on the verbal reasoning task, than early-onset depression participants. Current depression severity was negatively correlated with all four cognitive domains, while historical severity score was found to be significantly associated with cognitive performance on the verbal reasoning and spatial working memory tasks.

Conclusions: the most important indicator of cognitive performance in depression appears to be current, rather than historic depression severity; however, late-onset depression may be associated with more executive impairment than an early-onset depression.

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More information

Accepted/In Press date: 6 August 2018
e-pub ahead of print date: 27 September 2018

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 483654
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/483654
ISSN: 0885-6230
PURE UUID: ed749503-e3cb-4c23-a5af-e3dd00a0ef66
ORCID for Irem Ece Eraydin: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3468-1719

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Date deposited: 02 Nov 2023 18:25
Last modified: 18 Mar 2024 04:09

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Contributors

Author: Irem Ece Eraydin ORCID iD
Author: Christoph Mueller
Author: Anne Corbett
Author: Clive Ballard
Author: Helen Brooker
Author: Keith Wesnes
Author: Dag Aarsland
Author: Jonathan Huntley

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