SARS-CoV-2 infection and the risk of depressive symptoms: a retrospective longitudinal study from the population-based CONSTANCES cohort - Centre de recherche en Épidémiologie et Santé des Populations
Article Dans Une Revue Psychological Medicine Année : 2024

SARS-CoV-2 infection and the risk of depressive symptoms: a retrospective longitudinal study from the population-based CONSTANCES cohort

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Abstract Background Should COVID-19 have a direct impact on the risk of depression, it would suggest specific pathways for prevention and treatment. In this retrospective population-based study, we aimed to examine the association of prior SARS-CoV-2 infection with depressive symptoms, distinguishing self-reported v . biologically confirmed COVID-19. Methods 32 007 participants from the SAPRIS survey nested in the French CONSTANCES cohort were included. COVID-19 was measured as followed: ad hoc serologic testing, self-reported PCR or serology positive test results, and self-reported COVID-19. Depressive symptoms were measured with the Center of Epidemiologic Studies-Depression Scale (CES-D). Outcomes were depressive symptoms (total CES-D score, its four dimensions, and clinically significant depressive symptoms) and exposure was prior COVID-19 (no COVID-19/self-reported unconfirmed COVID-19/biologically confirmed COVID-19). Results In comparison to participants without COVID-19, participants with self-reported unconfirmed COVID-19 and biologically confirmed COVID-19 had higher CES-D scores ( β for one interquartile range increase [95% CI]: 0.15 [0.08–0.22] and 0.09 [0.05–0.13], respectively) and somatic complaints dimension scores (0.15 [0.09–0.21] and 0.10 [0.07–0.13]). Only those with self-reported but unconfirmed COVID-19 had higher depressed affect dimension scores (0.08 [0.01–0.14]). Accounting for ad hoc serologic testing only, the CES-D score and the somatic complaints dimension were only associated with the combination of self-reported COVID-19 and negative serology test results. Conclusions The association between COVID-19 and depressive symptoms was merely driven by somatic symptoms of depression and did not follow a gradient consistent with the hypothesis of a direct impact of SARS-CoV-2 infection on the risk of depression.
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hal-04788175 , version 1 (18-11-2024)

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Baptiste Pignon, Emmanuel Wiernik, Brigitte Ranque, Olivier Robineau, Fabrice Carrat, et al.. SARS-CoV-2 infection and the risk of depressive symptoms: a retrospective longitudinal study from the population-based CONSTANCES cohort. Psychological Medicine, 2024, pp.1-10. ⟨10.1017/s0033291724002435⟩. ⟨hal-04788175⟩
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