The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism Journal Article

The Cross-Sectional and Longitudinal Association Between Thyroid Function and Depression

May 14, 2024

A Population-Based Study

 

Oscar Hernando Roa Dueñas, Amy Hofman, Annemarie I Luik, Marco Medici, Robin P Peeters, Layal Chaker
The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology & Metabolism, Volume 109, Issue 5, May 2024, Pages e1389–e1399
https://doi.org/10.1210/clinem/dgad620

Abstract

Context

An association of thyroid function with mood disorders has been widely suggested, but very few studies have examined this association longitudinally.

Objective

We assessed the cross-sectional and longitudinal association between thyroid function and depression in a population-based cohort.

Methods

A total of 9471 individuals were included in cross-sectional analyses, of whom 8366 had longitudinal data. At baseline, we assessed thyroid function using serum samples (thyrotropin [TSH], free thyroxine (FT4), and thyroid peroxidase antibodies) and depressive symptoms using the Centre for Epidemiologic Studies Depression (CES-D) scale. Incident depressive events (n = 1366) were continuously followed up with the CES-D and clinical interviews. We analyzed the cross-sectional association of thyroid function and thyroid disease with depressive symptoms using linear and logistic regression, and the longitudinal association with Cox proportional hazard models for depressive events.

Results

Lower TSH levels and lower and higher FT4 levels were cross-sectionally associated with more depressive symptoms with a B value of −0.07 per 1 unit increase of natural log-transformed TSH (95% CI −0.11; −0.04). Furthermore, hypothyroidism was cross-sectionally associated with less depressive symptoms and hyperthyroidism with more depressive symptoms. Longitudinally, there was a U-shaped association between FT4 and incident depressive events but only in euthyroid participants.

Conclusion

We show a cross-sectional association between thyroid (dys)function with depressive symptoms, and a U-shaped association between FT4 and incident depressive events in euthyroid individuals. Our findings suggest an association of thyroid function with the risk of developing depression, albeit small. Reverse causation and additional underlying factors may also contribute to the association.

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