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Published in: BMC Endocrine Disorders 1/2015

Open Access 01-12-2015 | Research article

Marginal structural models for the estimation of the risk of Diabetes Mellitus in the presence of elevated depressive symptoms and antidepressant medication use in the Women’s Health Initiative observational and clinical trial cohorts

Authors: Christine Frisard, Xiangdong Gu, Brian Whitcomb, Yunsheng Ma, Penelope Pekow, Martha Zorn, Deidre Sepavich, Raji Balasubramanian

Published in: BMC Endocrine Disorders | Issue 1/2015

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Abstract

Background

We evaluate the combined effect of the presence of elevated depressive symptoms and antidepressant medication use with respect to risk of type 2 diabetes among approximately 120,000 women enrolled in the Women’s Health Initiative (WHI), and compare several different statistical models appropriate for causal inference in non-randomized settings.

Methods

Data were analyzed for 52,326 women in the Women’s Health Initiative Clinical Trials (CT) Cohort and 68,169 women in the Observational Study (OS) Cohort after exclusions. We included follow-up to 2005, resulting in a median duration of 7.6 years of follow up after enrollment. Results from three multivariable Cox models were compared to those from marginal structural models that included time varying measures of antidepressant medication use, presence of elevated depressive symptoms and BMI, while adjusting for potential confounders including age, ethnicity, education, minutes of recreational physical activity per week, total energy intake, hormone therapy use, family history of diabetes and smoking status.

Results

Our results are consistent with previous studies examining the relationship of antidepressant medication use and risk of type 2 diabetes. All models showed a significant increase in diabetes risk for those taking antidepressants. The Cox Proportional Hazards models using baseline covariates showed the lowest increase in risk , with hazard ratios of 1.19 (95 % CI 1.06 – 1.35) and 1.14 (95 % CI 1.01 – 1.30) in the OS and CT, respectively. Hazard ratios from marginal structural models comparing antidepressant users to non-users were 1.35 (95 % CI 1.21 – 1.51) and 1.27 (95 % CI 1.13 – 1.43) in the WHI OS and CT, respectively – however, differences among estimates from traditional Cox models and marginal structural models were not statistically significant in both cohorts. One explanation suggests that time-dependent confounding was not a substantial factor in these data, however other explanations exist. Unadjusted Cox Proportional Hazards models showed that women with elevated depressive symptoms had a significant increase in diabetes risk that remained after adjustment for confounders. However, this association missed the threshold for statistical significance in propensity score adjusted and marginal structural models.

Conclusions

Results from the multiple approaches provide further evidence of an increase in risk of type 2 diabetes for those on antidepressants.
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Metadata
Title
Marginal structural models for the estimation of the risk of Diabetes Mellitus in the presence of elevated depressive symptoms and antidepressant medication use in the Women’s Health Initiative observational and clinical trial cohorts
Authors
Christine Frisard
Xiangdong Gu
Brian Whitcomb
Yunsheng Ma
Penelope Pekow
Martha Zorn
Deidre Sepavich
Raji Balasubramanian
Publication date
01-12-2015
Publisher
BioMed Central
Published in
BMC Endocrine Disorders / Issue 1/2015
Electronic ISSN: 1472-6823
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12902-015-0049-7

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