Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review

Leslie Vaughan,1 Akeesha L Corbin,1 Joseph S Goveas2 1Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA; 2Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, MI, USA Abstract: Frailty and depression are important iss...

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Main Authors: Vaughan L, Corbin AL, Goveas JS
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Dove Medical Press 2015-12-01
Series:Clinical Interventions in Aging
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.dovepress.com/depression-and-frailty-in-later-life-a-systematic-review-peer-reviewed-article-CIA
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spelling doaj-8807f75cf4c5458ab3b78bba5cd1ad252020-11-24T22:27:26ZengDove Medical PressClinical Interventions in Aging1178-19982015-12-01Volume 101947195824966Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic reviewVaughan LCorbin ALGoveas JSLeslie Vaughan,1 Akeesha L Corbin,1 Joseph S Goveas2 1Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA; 2Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, MI, USA Abstract: Frailty and depression are important issues affecting older adults. Depressive syndrome may be difficult to clinically disambiguate from frailty in advanced old age. Current reviews on the topic include studies with wide methodological variation. This review examined the published literature on cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between frailty and depressive symptomatology with either syndrome as the outcome, moderators of this relationship, construct overlap, and related medical and behavioral interventions. Prevalence of both was reported. A systematic review of studies published from 2000 to 2015 was conducted in PubMed, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and PsychInfo. Key search terms were “frailty”, “frail”, “frail elderly”, “depressive”, “depressive disorder”, and “depression”. Participants of included studies were ≥55 years old and community dwelling. Included studies used an explicit biological definition of frailty based on Fried et al’s criteria and a screening measure to identify depressive symptomatology. Fourteen studies met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. The prevalence of depressive symptomatology, frailty, or their co-occurrence was greater than 10% in older adults ≥55 years old, and these rates varied widely, but less in large epidemiological studies of incident frailty. The prospective relationship between depressive symptomatology and increased risk of incident frailty was robust, while the opposite relationship was less conclusive. The presence of comorbidities that interact with depressive symptomatology increased incident frailty risk. Measurement variability of depressive symptomatology and inclusion of older adults who are severely depressed, have cognitive impairment or dementia, or stroke may confound the frailty syndrome with single disease outcomes, accounting for a substantial proportion of shared variance in the syndromes. Further study is needed to identify medical and behavioral interventions for frailty and depressive symptomatology that prevent adverse sequelae such as falls, disability, and premature mortality. Keywords: frailty, depression, depressive symptomatology, aginghttps://www.dovepress.com/depression-and-frailty-in-later-life-a-systematic-review-peer-reviewed-article-CIAFrailtyDepressive SymptomatologyDepressionAgingReview
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Vaughan L
Corbin AL
Goveas JS
spellingShingle Vaughan L
Corbin AL
Goveas JS
Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
Clinical Interventions in Aging
Frailty
Depressive Symptomatology
Depression
Aging
Review
author_facet Vaughan L
Corbin AL
Goveas JS
author_sort Vaughan L
title Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
title_short Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
title_full Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
title_fullStr Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
title_full_unstemmed Depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
title_sort depression and frailty in later life: a systematic review
publisher Dove Medical Press
series Clinical Interventions in Aging
issn 1178-1998
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Leslie Vaughan,1 Akeesha L Corbin,1 Joseph S Goveas2 1Department of Social Sciences and Health Policy, Wake Forest School of Medicine, Winston-Salem, NC, USA; 2Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Medicine, Medical College of Wisconsin, MI, USA Abstract: Frailty and depression are important issues affecting older adults. Depressive syndrome may be difficult to clinically disambiguate from frailty in advanced old age. Current reviews on the topic include studies with wide methodological variation. This review examined the published literature on cross-sectional and longitudinal associations between frailty and depressive symptomatology with either syndrome as the outcome, moderators of this relationship, construct overlap, and related medical and behavioral interventions. Prevalence of both was reported. A systematic review of studies published from 2000 to 2015 was conducted in PubMed, the Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews, and PsychInfo. Key search terms were “frailty”, “frail”, “frail elderly”, “depressive”, “depressive disorder”, and “depression”. Participants of included studies were ≥55 years old and community dwelling. Included studies used an explicit biological definition of frailty based on Fried et al’s criteria and a screening measure to identify depressive symptomatology. Fourteen studies met the inclusion/exclusion criteria. The prevalence of depressive symptomatology, frailty, or their co-occurrence was greater than 10% in older adults ≥55 years old, and these rates varied widely, but less in large epidemiological studies of incident frailty. The prospective relationship between depressive symptomatology and increased risk of incident frailty was robust, while the opposite relationship was less conclusive. The presence of comorbidities that interact with depressive symptomatology increased incident frailty risk. Measurement variability of depressive symptomatology and inclusion of older adults who are severely depressed, have cognitive impairment or dementia, or stroke may confound the frailty syndrome with single disease outcomes, accounting for a substantial proportion of shared variance in the syndromes. Further study is needed to identify medical and behavioral interventions for frailty and depressive symptomatology that prevent adverse sequelae such as falls, disability, and premature mortality. Keywords: frailty, depression, depressive symptomatology, aging
topic Frailty
Depressive Symptomatology
Depression
Aging
Review
url https://www.dovepress.com/depression-and-frailty-in-later-life-a-systematic-review-peer-reviewed-article-CIA
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