When Blue-Collars Feel Blue

Author:

Lemogne Cédric1,Meneton Pierre1,Wiernik Emmanuel1,Quesnot Ariane1,Consoli Silla M.1,Ducimetière Pierre1,Nabi Hermann1,Empana Jean-Philippe1,Hoertel Nicolas1,Limosin Frédéric1,Goldberg Marcel1,Zins Marie1

Affiliation:

1. From the Université Paris Descartes, Sorbonne Paris Cité, Faculté de Médecine, France (C.L., S.M.C., J.-P.E., N.H., F.L., M.G., M.Z.); AP-HP, Hôpitaux Universitaires Paris Ouest, Service de Psychiatrie de l’Adulte et du Sujet Agé, France (C.L., S.M.C., N.H., F.L.); Inserm, U894, Centre Psychiatrie et Neurosciences, Paris, France (C.L., N.H., F.L.); Inserm U1142 LIMICS, UMR_S 1142 Sorbonne Université, UPMC Université Paris 06, Université Paris 13, France (P.M.); Université Paris-Saclay, Univ. Paris...

Abstract

Background— The association of psychological variables with cardiovascular health might depend on socioeconomic status. We examined the moderating effect of occupational grade on the association between depression and incident cardiac events among middle-aged workers from the GAZEL cohort. Methods and Results— A total of 10 541 participants (7855 men, mean age: 47.8±3.5 years) free of cardiovascular diseases completed the Center of Epidemiologic Studies Depression scale in 1993. Age, sex, and occupational grade (low, medium, and high) were obtained from company records. Classical cardiovascular risk factors were self-reported. All participants were followed-up for medically certified cardiac events from January 1994 to December 2014. Associations between baseline variables and incident cardiac events were estimated with hazard ratios and 95% confidence intervals computed in Cox regressions. After a median follow-up of 21 years, 592 (5.6%) participants had a cardiac event. There was a significant interaction between depression and occupational grade in both age- and sex-adjusted ( P =0.008) and multiadjusted ( P =0.009) models. This interaction was mainly explained by an association between depression and incident cardiac events that prevailed among participants of low occupational grade (3.71 versus 1.96 events per 1000 person-years among those depressed versus nondepressed, multiadjusted hazard ratios [95% confidence intervals], 1.99 [1.12–3.48]). Conclusions— From a research perspective, these results may account for previous conflicting results and constitute an impetus for reanalyzing previous data sets, taking into account the moderating role of socioeconomic status. From a clinical perspective, they urge clinicians and policy makers to consider depressive symptoms and low socioeconomic status as synergistic cardiovascular risk factors.

Publisher

Ovid Technologies (Wolters Kluwer Health)

Subject

Cardiology and Cardiovascular Medicine

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