Author:
Lamers F.,Beekman A. T. F.,van Hemert A. M.,Schoevers R. A.,Penninx B. W. J. H.
Abstract
BackgroundClinical and aetiological heterogeneity have impeded our understanding of
depression.AimsTo evaluate differences in psychiatric and somatic course between people
with depression subtypes that differed clinically (severity) and
aetiologically (melancholic v. atypical).MethodData from baseline, 2-, 4- and 6-year follow-up of The Netherlands Study
of Depression and Anxiety were used, and included 600 controls and 648
people with major depressive disorder (subtypes: severe melancholic
n = 308; severe atypical n = 167;
moderate n = 173, established using latent class
analysis).ResultsThose with the moderate subtype had a significantly better psychiatric
clinical course than the severe melancholic and atypical subtype groups.
Suicidal thoughts and anxiety persisted longer in those with the
melancholic subtype. The atypical subtype group continued to have the
highest body mass index and highest prevalence of metabolic syndrome
during follow-up, although differences between groups became less
pronounced over time.ConclusionsCourse trajectories of depressive subtypes mostly ran parallel to each
other, with baseline severity being the most important differentiator in
course between groups.
Publisher
Royal College of Psychiatrists
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health
Cited by
75 articles.
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