Comorbidities of Late-life Depression: An Increased Risk of
Dementia
The paper
“Reconsidering remission in recurrent late-life depression: clinical
presentation and phenotypic predictors of relapse following successful
antidepressant treatment” (Taylor et al., 2025) covers a study that focused on participant’s
susceptibility to relapse after a period of remission, over the course of a two-year
timespan.
Late-life
depression specifically refers to repeated recurrent depressive episodes and is
typically seen in adults of a more advanced age. Some of its major symptoms are
increased disability, poor or impaired cognitive function and an increased risk
of dementia. Even with regular
treatment, these patients remain at a high risk of relapse – between 35% and 45%
of patients – which is thought to only worsen the already negative effects of
the symptoms on patients.
Although
patients with late-life depression do not necessarily experience a more rapid
decline than those who have never been depressed, they were shown to perform worse
at baseline cognitive functions than individuals with either early-onset
depression or no depression at all (Ly et al., 2021). This suggests that
individuals with late-onset depression might have a lower threshold for
developing dementia. The increase in symptom severity associated with multiple
remissions of late-life depression may also explain the more rapid decline in
verbal skills and delayed memory ability. Considering that recurrence risk is substantially
influenced by an individual’s environmental and social factors – and that recurrence
in people with late-life depression has been associated with lower levels of instrumental
social support – it is not entirely difficult to see why their baseline is significantly
lower than individuals in other test groups.
References
Taylor WD et al (2024). Reconsidering remission in recurrent
late-life depression: clinical presentation and phenotypic predictors of
relapse following successful antidepressant treatment. Psychological Medicine
54, 4896–4907. https://doi.org/10.1017/S0033291724003246
Ly, M., Karim, H.T., Becker, J.T. et al. Late-life
depression and increased risk of dementia: a longitudinal cohort study. Transl
Psychiatry 11, 147 (2021).
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-021-01269-y
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