Trajectories of antidepressant use and 6-year change in body weight: a prospective population-based cohort study

Other authors

Universitat Ramon Llull. Facultat de Ciències de la Salut Blanquerna

Publication date

2024-12



Abstract

Background: Antidepressant drug treatment may be associated with weight gain, but long-term studies are lacking. Methods: We included 3,127 adults (1,701 women) from the REGICOR study, aged 55.6 (SD = 11.6) years on average in 2003–2006, living in the northeast of Spain. They had data at two time points (baseline and a median of 6.3 years later) on self-reported antidepressant use, body weight and height, and on baseline smoking, physical activity, diet quality, education, civil status, and depressive symptoms assessed with the Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9) at follow-up. We defined four trajectories of antidepressant use as follows: never use, new use at follow-up, initial use discontinued, repeated use at both time points. We used multivariable linear models to estimate the association of these trajectories with the percentage of weight change. In people without obesity at baseline (n = 2,404), we also estimated the association with obesity incidence at follow-up. Results: The average 6-year weight gain was 0.53 kg (1.01% body weight), and 24.5% of the participants gained >5% of body weight. The majority (83.6%) of participants did not report any use of antidepressants, 6.2% initiated during follow-up, 5.1% discontinued it, and 5.1% reported their use at both time points. In multivariable analyses, compared to never users, all trajectories were associated with greater weight gain: +1.78% (0.57, 2.98) for initial use discontinued, +2.08% (0.97, 3.19) for new use at follow-up, and +1.98% (95% CI: 0.75, 3.20) for repeated use. In non-obese participants at baseline (n = 2,404), the odds ratio for becoming obese was 2.06 (1.03, 3.96) for repeated use and non-statistically significant for the other trajectories. Conclusions: In a population-based adult cohort, repeated use of antidepressants was strongly associated with weight gain. New and discontinued use was associated with weight gain, but non-significantly to obesity incidence. Given the global obesity epidemic and the widespread use of antidepressants, weight management and metabolic monitoring should be encouraged and integrated into depression follow-up guidelines alongside antidepressant prescriptions.

Document Type

Article

Document version

Published version

Language

English

Pages

10 p.

Publisher

Frontiers

Published in

Frontiers in Psychiatry, 2024, 15: 1464898

Grant Agreement Number

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/ISCIII/CB16/11/00246

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/La Caixa/ID 100010434

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/EU/H2020/Grant agreement 847648

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/ISCIII i ERDF/FIS PI12/00232

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/MINECO/ISCIII i ERDF/FIS PI15/00051

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/SUR del DEC/SGR/PERIS SLT002/16/00088

info:eu-repo/grantAgreement/SUR del DEC/SGR/2017SGR222

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