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AIDS Care
Psychological and Socio-medical Aspects of AIDS/HIV
Volume 23, 2011 - Issue 10
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ORIGINAL ARTICLES

Somatic symptoms and the association between hepatitis C infection and depression in HIV-infected patients

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Pages 1208-1218 | Received 20 Apr 2010, Accepted 12 Jan 2011, Published online: 11 May 2011
 

Abstract

Studies of depression and hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection in HIV-infected patients have been contradictory and often not addressed key differences between HCV-infected and uninfected individuals including substance use. This cross-sectional observational study from the University of Washington HIV cohort examined associations between HCV, symptoms, and depression in HIV-infected patients in routine clinical care. Patients completed instruments measuring depression, symptoms, and substance use. We generated depression severity scores and used linear regression to examine the relationship with HCV accounting for demographic and clinical characteristics. We conducted sensitivity analyses in which we removed depression somatic symptom items (e.g., fatigue) from depression scores, and sensitivity analyses in which we also adjusted for nondepression somatic symptom items to examine the role of somatic and nonsomatic symptoms in the association between depression and HCV. Of 764 HIV-infected patients, 160 (21%) were HCV-infected. In adjusted analysis, HCV-infected patients had worse depression severity (p =0.01) even after adjusting for differences in substance use. HCV remained associated with depression severity in secondary analyses that omitted the depression somatic patient health questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) items (p=0.01). However, when nondepression somatic symptoms were included as covariates in multivariate analyses, HCV was no longer associated with depression (p=0.09).

Acknowledgements

We thank the patients and providers of the University of Washington Madison HIV clinic. This work was supported by grants from the Mentored Patient-Oriented Research Career Development Award NIAID Grant (AI-60464), the NIH NIMH RO1 grant (RO1MH084759), the CFAR-Network of Integrated Clinical Systems (CNICS) (NIH R24 AI067039), and the University of Washington Center for AIDS Research NIAID Grant (AI27757). Data from this study were presented in part at the International Workshop on HIV Observational Databases, Sitges, Spain, March 2010.

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