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DEPRESSION AND SMOKING: A 5‐YEAR PROSPECTIVE STUDY OF PATIENTS WITH MAJOR DEPRESSIVE DISORDER
Author(s) -
Holma Irina A. K.,
Holma K. Mikael,
Melartin Tarja K.,
Ketokivi Mikko,
Isometsä Erkki T.
Publication year - 2013
Publication title -
depression and anxiety
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.634
H-Index - 129
eISSN - 1520-6394
pISSN - 1091-4269
DOI - 10.1002/da.22108
Subject(s) - depression (economics) , psychiatry , major depressive disorder , confounding , neuroticism , comorbidity , longitudinal study , psychology , clinical psychology , alcohol use disorder , medicine , personality , alcohol , cognition , social psychology , biochemistry , chemistry , pathology , economics , macroeconomics
Background Major depressive disorder (MDD) and smoking are major public health problems and epidemiologically strongly associated. However, the relationship between smoking and depression and whether this is influenced by common confounding factors remain unclear, in part due to limited longitudinal data on covariation. Methods In the Vantaa Depression Study, psychiatric out‐ and inpatients with DSM‐IV MDD and aged 20–59 years at were followed from baseline to 6 months, 18 months, and 5 years. We investigated course of depression, smoking, and comorbid alcohol‐use disorders among the 214 patients (79.6% of 269) participating at least three time points; differences between smoking versus nonsmoking patients, and covariation of MDD, smoking, and alcohol‐use disorders. Results Overall, 31.3% of the patients smoked regularly, 41.1% intermittently, and 27.6% never. Smokers were younger, had more alcohol‐use disorders and Cluster B and C personality disorder symptoms, a higher frequency of lifetime suicide attempts, higher neuroticism, smaller social networks, and lower perceived social support than never smokers. Smoking and depression had limited longitudinal covariation. Depression, smoking, and alcohol‐use disorders all exhibited strong autoregressive tendencies. Conclusions Among adult psychiatric MDD patients, smoking is strongly associated with substance‐use and personality disorders, which may confound research on the impact of smoking. Rather than depression or smoking covarying or predicting each other, depression, smoking, and alcohol‐use disorders each have strong autoregressive tendencies. These findings are more consistent with common factors causing their association than either of the conditions strongly predisposing to the other.

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