Is suppressed thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) associated with subclinical depression in the
Danish General Suburban Population Study?
Engelsk titel: Is suppressed thyroid-stimulating hormone (TSH) associated with subclinical depression in the
Danish General Suburban Population Study?
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Författare:
Kvetny, Jan
;
Ellervik, Christina
;
Bech, Per
Email: per.bech@regionh.dk
Språk: Eng
Antal referenser: 25
Dokumenttyp:
Artikel
UI-nummer: 15061027
Sammanfattning
Background: The first phase of the Danish General Suburban Population Study (GESUS) including
8214 individuals was an attempt to evaluate the association between subclinical hypothyroidism
without or with elevated peroxidase antibodies and depression. No such association was found. In
the second phase, including 14,787 individuals, we have focused on suppressed TSH (thyroid-
stimulating hormone) and depression. Aims: To evaluate to what extent suppressed TSH is
associated with subclinical depression. Methods: The total scores of the Major Depression Inventory
(MDI) were used to evaluate subclinical depression, both by its total score and by an algorithm of the
subthreshold depressed by presence of at least three of the 10 ICD-10 depression symptoms. Serum
levels of TSH were used to classify the individuals into suppressed (TSH < 0.4 mIU/l), elevated (TSH
= 3.8 mIU/l) and normal reference (TSH between 0.4 and 3.7 mIU/l). Results: We identified 285
individuals with suppressed TSH and 1266 individuals with elevated TSH. The MDI total score was
7.55 in suppressed TSH individuals, 6.22 in elevated TSH individuals and 6.52 in normal reference
individuals (P = 0.01). When the MDI was used diagnostically to identify subclinical depression, the
prevalence was 8.07% in suppressed TSH individuals, 5.8% in normal reference individuals and
5.29% in elevated TSH individuals. Conclusion: This population-based study supports that persons
with suppressed TSH (subclinical hyperthyroidism) seem to have a risk, although small, of
subclinical depression.