Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
Archives of Psychiatric Nursing
a r t i c l e i n f o a b s t r a c t
Article history: BACKGROUND: There are no data about the frequency of major depression in patients with liver disease related to
Received 30 August 2016 Hepatitis B virus (HBV) in China. This study examined the prevalence of major depression and its clinical corre-
Revised 11 January 2017 lates and association with quality of life (QOL) in patients with HBV-related liver diseases.
Accepted 4 February 2017 METHOD: Altogether 634 patients with HBV-related liver diseases met study entry criteria and completed the survey.
The diagnosis of major depression was established with the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI).
KEYWORDS:
Socio-demographic and clinical characteristics, Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) and QOL were measured.
HBV-related liver diseases
Depression
RESULTS: The prevalence of major depression was 6.4%. Multivariable logistic regression analyses revealed that in-
Quality of life somnia (P = 0.01, OR = 5.5, 95%CI = 1.4–21.6) and global functioning (P b 0.001, OR = 0.6, 95% CI = 0.5–0.7)
China were independently associated with major depression. Major depression was associated with both poor physical
(F (1, 634) = 4.0, P = 0.04) and mental QOL (F (1, 634) = 26.2, P b 0.001).
CONCLUSIONS: Given the negative impact of depression on patients' QOL, more attempts should be made to identify
and treat it in HBV-related diseases.
© 2017 Published by Elsevier Inc.
INTRODUCTION costs. For example, more than one billion USD per year is spent on diseases
related to hepatitis B infection in the USA (Keshavarz et al., 2015).
Hepatitis B virus (HBV) infection is a prevalent infectious disease HBV-related diseases are associated with fatigue, loss of appetite, ab-
(Shepard, Simard, Finelli, Fiore, & Bell, 2006). The World Health Organiza- dominal pain and psychological disturbances, such as low self-esteem
tion estimated that approximately 2 billion people have serologic evidence (Gutteling et al., 2006; Kim, Oh, & Lee, 2006). In addition, discrimination
of present or past HBV infection and 350–400 million people are chronical- and stigma related to HBV disease often affect patients and their families
ly infected (Custer et al., 2004; MacLachlan, Locarnini, & Cowie, 2015; (Huang et al., 2016; Kan, Wen, & Xue, 2015). Patients with HBV-related
WHO, 2016). In China, there are around 93 million HBV carriers and diseases are prone to suffer from loneliness, hopelessness and social iso-
about 30 million suffer from chronic hepatitis B (Liang et al., 2009). Hepa- lation (Gutteling, de Man, Busschbach, & Darlington, 2007; Gutteling et
titis B infection is highly contagious and greatly increases the risk of chron- al., 2006). All these factors could increase the risk of psychiatric comor-
ic hepatitis, hepatic cirrhosis and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) (Chan, bidities, particularly depression (Mirabdolhagh, Dormohammadi,
Wong, Qin, & Chan, 2016). HBV-related diseases cause immeasurable suf- Nasiri, Tavakoli, & Shahbazi, 2015).
fering for patients and their families and enormous economic and social A few studies examined the prevalence of depression in HBV-infected
patients in China. Duan et al. (Duan, Kong, Zhang, & Guo, 2012) exam-
ined 120 patients with HBV-infection using the Hamilton Depression
⁎ Correspondence to: Z.-P. Duan, Beijing YouAn Hospital, Beijing 100069, China. Rating Scale (HAMD) and found that compared to the healthy controls,
⁎⁎ Correspondence to: Y.-T. Xiang, 3/F, Building E12, Faculty of Health Sciences,
University of Macau, Avenida da Universidade, Taipa, Macau SAR, China.
patients had significantly higher levels of depression. Zhu et al. (Zhu et
E-mail addresses: duan2517@163.com (Z.-P. Duan), xyutly@gmail.com (Y.-T. Xiang). al., 2016) measured depressive symptoms with the HAMD in 114 pa-
1
These authors contributed equally to the paper. tients with chronic hepatitis B (CHB) and cirrhosis and found that
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.apnu.2017.02.004
0883-9417/© 2017 Published by Elsevier Inc.
288 M. Liu et al. / Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 31 (2017) 287–290
depressive symptoms in liver cirrhosis were associated with the severity STATISTICAL ANALYSIS
of cirrhosis. The common limitation of these studies was the small sam-
ple size, which limits generalizability and precision. In addition, the diag- Data were analyzed using SPSS 21.0 for Windows. Comparisons be-
nosis of depressive illness was inadequate as it was based only on simple tween patients diagnosed with major depression or not for demograph-
questionnaires instead of thorough psychiatric assessment. ic and clinical variables were performed using chi-square tests, t-tests
The aim of this study was to examine the point prevalence (preva- and Mann-Whitney U test, as appropriate. QOL was compared between
lence thereafter) of major depression using a structured clinical inter- groups using analysis of covariance (ANCOVA) after controlling for the
view, the Mini International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI potentially confounding effects of variables that significantly differed
(Sheehan et al., 1998; Si et al., 2009)) and its associations with demo- in above univariate analyses. The independent associations of demo-
graphic and clinical characteristics and quality of life (QOL). graphic and clinical characteristics with major depression were con-
ducted by multivariable logistic regression analyses using the “Enter”
METHODS method. Major depression was entered as the dependent variable,
while variables age, gender, education, marital status, local residence,
STUDY SETTING AND PATIENTS personal income, family history of psychiatric disorders, medical histo-
ry, diagnoses of HBV-related liver diseases, age of onset of HBV, duration
This study was conducted between June 1, 2014 and January 31, of HBV-related liver disease, current use of alcohol, insomnia, GAF
2015 in Beijing YouAn Hospital, an 800-bed university-affiliated teach- scores and stigma score were entered as the independent variables.
ing hospital for infectious diseases. In- and out-patients were consecu- Due to collinearity between the site of treatment (in- or out-patient)
tively screened and recruited if they were (1) 18 years or above; (2) and HBA diagnoses, age of onset of HBV and number of hospitalizations,
diagnosed as being a HBV carrier, or having CHB, hepatitis B cirrhosis treatment site and number of hospitalizations were not entered in the
or HCC according to the Guidelines of Prevention and Treatment for logistic regression model. The level of significance was set at 0.05
Chronic Hepatitis B (Jia & Li, 2011) and the Recommendations of the (two-tailed).
Asian Pacific Association for the Study of the Liver (APASL) for the man-
agement of hepatocellular carcinoma (Sarin et al., 2009); (3) of Chinese RESULT
descent; (4) able to communicate, tolerate the one-hour interview, and
understood the purpose of the study. Patients who had major depres- Altogether 812 patients with chronic HBV infection were invited to
sion before the diagnosis of HBV infection were excluded. The study participate in the study; 634 patients (454 men and 180 women) met
protocol was approved by the Beijing YouAn Hospital Clinical Research the inclusion criteria and completed the assessment, yielding a 78.1%
Ethics committee. All patients provided written informed consent. participation rate. Then proportions of HBV carrier, chronic hepatitis B,
HBV-related cirrhosis, HBV-related HCC were 9.5%, 36.2%, 28.5% and
ASSESSMENT INSTRUMENTS AND EVALUATION 25.8%, respectively. The prevalence of major depression was 6.4%.
Table 2
& Shafqat, 2012). The discrepancy across studies may be partly due to
Demographic and clinical characteristics of the whole sample and separately by major the difference in severity of HBV-related liver diseases and measure-
depression. ment instruments. In this study the prevalence of major depression
Total No major Major Statistics
was significantly higher than in the Chinese general population (1.6%)
sample depression depression (Gu et al., 2013). There are several possible reasons for the higher prev-
(n = 634) (n = 593) (n = 41) alence of major depression. HBV-related diseases are accompanied with
N % N % N % χ2 df p somatic complaints, such as fatigue, and muscle cramps, which may in-
Inpatients 345 54.4 324 54.6 21 51.2 0.1 1 0.6 crease the risk of depression (Kim et al., 2006; Yilmaz et al., 2016). In ad-
Male sex 454 71.6 430 72.5 22 53.7 6.6 1 0.01 dition, due to the infectious nature of HBV, discrimination against
Married 550 86.8 514 86.7 36 87.8 0.04 1 0.8 people with HBV-related liver diseases remains widespread in China
Local residents 272 42.9 260 43.8 12 29.3 3.3 1 0.06
Living alone 22 3.5 20 3.4 2 4.9 0.005 1 0.9
(Huang et al., 2016; Kan et al., 2015). People with HBV-related diseases
Personal income 210 33.1 194 32.7 16 39.0 0.6 1 0.4 often face social isolation, a contributing factor to the development of
b3000 yuan depression (Atesci et al., 2005). Furthermore, depression is one of the
Having health 14 2.2 13 2.2 1 2.4 0.01 1 0.9 side effects of interferon given against HBV infection (Arslan,
insurance
Buyukgebiz, Ozturk, & Akay, 2003; Hunt et al., 1997; Keskin, Gumus, &
Family history of 17 2.7 14 2.4 3 7.3 1.9 1 0.1
psychiatric Orgun, 2013). Finally, in China, patients with HBV-related diseases and
disorders their families are often stigmatized (Huang et al., 2016; Kan et al.,
Current alcohol 109 17.2 103 17.4 6 14.6 0.2 1 0.6 2015), and families have to cope with discrimination and shame. In an
use attempt to maintain the families' honor, the patient conceals or denies
History of 282 44.5 262 44.2 20 48.8 0.3 1 0.5
medical
their infectious disease status, a phenomenon called ‘courtesy stigma’
conditions (Goffman, 1968). Such familial “courtesy stigma” is thought to increase
HBV-related liver 0.1 3 0.9 the risk of depression (Yue et al., 2013; Zhuang et al., 2014).
disease Female gender and socioeconomic status have been found to be sig-
Carrier 60 9.5 56 9.4 4 9.8
nificantly associated with depression in the Chinese general population
CHB 229 36.1 213 35.9 16 39.0
Cirrhosis 181 28.5 170 28.7 11 26.8 and some special populations, such as migrant workers (Ma et al., 2009;
HCC 164 25.9 154 26.0 10 24.4 Zhong et al., 2015). This study could not confirm these associations. The
Insomnia 166 26.2 133 22.4 33 80.5 66.8 1 b0.001 possible reason may be that in this population the association of depres-
Mean SD Mean SD Mean SD T/Z df p sion with gender and socioeconomic status was mediated by disease-re-
Age (years) 48.0 13.8 47.9 13.9 44.7 12.1 1.4 632 0.2 late variables, such as severity of HBV-related liver diseases and side
Age of onset of 34.1 14.6 34.0 14.3 29.9 13.4 1.7 632 0.6 effects of interferon therapy (Kovacs, Kovacs, Eszlari, Gonda, & Juhasz,
HBV (years) 2016).
Duration of 14.0 11.4 13.9 11.0 15.5 14.4 −0.8 –a 0.3
Depression was reported to be one of the strongest predictors of QOL
HBV-related
liver disease (Xiang, Weng, Leung, Tang, & Ungvari, 2008), which was confirmed in
(years) this study. Similar to previous findings (Atesci et al., 2005; Enescu,
Education (years) 11.2 4.8 11.1 4.6 9.9 3.7 1.6 632 0.5 Mitrut, Balasoiu, Turculeanu, & Enescu, 2014; Kunkel et al., 2000), de-
GAF 74.5 12.6 76.0 11.4 52.3 6.4 13.0 632 b0.001
pression was associated with lower QOL and impaired global function-
SF-12 physical 46.2 8.2 46.4 7.9 43.1 11.6 2.4 632 b0.001
SF-12 mental 49.1 10.1 50.4 8.8 30.6 9.7 13.6 632 0.3 ing, which may be due to obstacles to social integration and impaired
a
occupational functioning associated with HBV infection. In this study,
= Mann-Whitney U test; bolded values are p b 0.05; CHB = chronic hepatitis B;
GAF = Global Assessment of Functioning; HCC = hepatocellular carcinoma; MADRS =
insomnia was positively associated with depression. This was expected
Montgomery-Asberg Depression Rating Scale; MINI = Mini International Neuropsychiat- as insomnia is one of the diagnostic criteria of major depression
ric Interview; SF-12 = Medical Outcomes Study Short Form 12. (American Psychiatric Association, 1994). Depression is associated
290 M. Liu et al. / Archives of Psychiatric Nursing 31 (2017) 287–290
with lack of energy, difficulties concentration and fatigue (Irwin, 2001), Keshavarz, K., Kebriaeezadeh, A., Alavian, S. M., Akbari Sari, A., Abedin Dorkoosh, F.,
Keshvari, M., ... Nikfar, S. (2015). Economic burden of hepatitis B virus-related dis-
which may lead to daytime naps thereby increasing the risk of insomnia eases: Evidence from Iran. Hepatitis Monthly, 15(4).
at night. Keskin, G., Gumus, A. B., & Orgun, F. (2013). Quality of life, depression, and anxiety among
The strengths of this study include the large, consecutively selected hepatitis B patients. Gastroenterology Nursing, 36(5), 346–356.
Kim, S. H., Oh, E. G., & Lee, W. H. (2006). Symptom experience, psychological distress, and
and homogeneous sample and the use of physician administered stan- quality of life in Korean patients with liver cirrhosis: A cross-sectional survey.
dardized clinical interviews to diagnosis major depression. However, International Journal of Nursing Studies, 43(8), 1047–1056.
the results should be interpreted with caution due to several limitations. Kovacs, D., Kovacs, P., Eszlari, N., Gonda, X., & Juhasz, G. (2016). Psychological side effects
of immune therapies: Symptoms and pathomechanism. Current Opinion in
First, due to the cross-sectional design, the causality between depres- Pharmacology, 29, 97–103.
sion and its correlates could not be identified. Second, insomnia was Kunkel, E. J., Kim, J. S., Hann, H. W., Oyesanmi, O., Menefee, L. A., Field, H. L., ... Myers, R. E.
evaluated only by self-report, thus recall bias could not be excluded. Fi- (2000). Depression in Korean immigrants with hepatitis B and related liver diseases.
Psychosomatics, 41(6), 472–480.
nally, some important variables, such as family support, have not been
Liang, X., Bi, S., Yang, W., Wang, L., Cui, G., Cui, F., ... Wang, Y. (2009). Epidemiological
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with poor patient physical and mental health QOL. Surveillance and Liu, X., & Zhou, H. (2002). Sleep duration, insomnia and behavioral problems among Chi-
nese adolescents. Psychiatry Research, 111(1), 75–85.
treatment of depression among patients with HBV-related diseases Liu, X., Uchiyama, M., Okawa, M., & Kurita, H. (2000). Prevalence and correlates of self-re-
should become a priority. ported sleep problems among Chinese adolescents. Sleep, 23(1), 27–34.
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CONFLICT OF INTEREST urban areas of Beijing, China. Journal of Affective Disorders, 115(3), 323–330.
MacLachlan, J. H., Locarnini, S., & Cowie, B. C. (2015). Estimating the global prevalence of
hepatitis B. The Lancet, 386(10003), 1515–1517.
The authors report no conflict of interest in conducting this study Mirabdolhagh, H.,. M., Dormohammadi, T.,. T., Nasiri, T.,. M., Tavakoli, A., & Shahbazi, F.
and preparing the manuscript. (2015). Prevalence and severity of depression in chronic viral hepatitis in Iran.
Gastroenterol Rep (Oxf), 3(3), 234–237.
Montgomery, S. A., & Asberg, M. (1979). A new depression scale designed to be sensitive
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Qureshi, M. O., Khokhar, N., & Shafqat, F. (2012). Severity of depression in hepatitis B and
hepatitis C patients. Journal of the College of Physicians and Surgeons–Pakistan, 22(10),
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