학술논문

Anxiety and depression in adult patients with familial Mediterranean fever: a study comparing patients living in Germany and Turkey.
Document Type
Article
Source
International Journal of Rheumatic Diseases. Dec2017, Vol. 20 Issue 12, p2093-2100. 8p.
Subject
*FAMILIAL Mediterranean fever
*ANXIETY
*DEPRESSED persons
*REGRESSION analysis
*ROBUST control
*PATIENTS
Language
ISSN
1756-1841
Abstract
Abstract: Aim: To determine the prevalence of anxiety and depression among patients with familial Mediterranean fever (FMF) living in Germany or Turkey a prospective study was conducted. Methods: Forty FMF patients living in Turkey (T), 40 FMF patients living in Germany (G) and 40 healthy controls living in Germany (C) were included. Patients and controls were of Turkish ancestry. G were compared to T and C. The Hospital Anxiety and Depression Scale (HADS) was used with a cut‐off of ≥ 8 for each subdomain score (HADS‐A, HADS‐D). Results: Baseline characteristics of G were comparable to T and C except for age (T: 30.5 years, G: 35.2 years, C: 34.6 years; T vs. G = 0.045), duration of disease (T: 14.4 years, G: 24; < 0.001), C‐reactive protein (T: 0.78 mg/dL, G: 0.78 mg/dL, C: 0.35 mg/dL; G vs. C = 0.03). Prevalence of anxiety was higher in G compared to C (T: 65%, G: 52.5%, C: 22.5%: G vs. C < 0.05). No difference was found for the prevalence of depression (T: 30%, G: 35%, C: 20%). The association between FMF and anxiety in subjects living in Germany persisted after adjusting for age and gender in a regression analysis and was robust to an adjustment for coexisting depression. Anxiety and depression did not correlate with FMF disease severity assessed with the Pras score. Conclusion: Anxiety, but not depression is more common among FMF patients living in Germany compared to healthy controls. No significant difference could be found between FMF patients living in Germany or Turkey concerning the prevalence of anxiety or depression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]