Abstract
Chronic pain is commonly co-morbid with a depressive or anxiety disorder. Objective of this study is to examine the influence of depression, along with anxiety, on pain-related disability, pain intensity, and pain location in a large sample of adults with and without a depressive and/or anxiety disorder. The study population consisted of 2981 participants with a depressive, anxiety, co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder, remitted disorder or no current disorder (controls). Severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms was also assessed. In separate multinomial regression analyses, the association of presence of depressive or anxiety disorders and symptom severity with the Chronic Pain Grade and location of pain was explored. Presence of a depressive (OR = 6.67; P<.001), anxiety (OR = 4.84; P<.001), or co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder (OR = 30.26; P<.001) was associated with the Chronic Pain Grade. Moreover, symptom severity was associated with more disabling and severely limiting pain. Also, a remitted depressive or anxiety disorder showed more disabling and severely limiting pain (OR = 3.53; P<.001) as compared to controls. A current anxiety disorder (OR = 2.96; p<.001) and a co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder (OR = 5.15; P<.001) were more strongly associated with cardio-respiratory pain, than gastro-intestinal or musculoskeletal pain. These findings remain after adjustment for chronic cardio respiratory illness. Patients with a current and remitted depressive and/or anxiety disorder and those with more severe symptoms have more disabling pain and pain of cardio-respiratory nature, than persons without a depressive or anxiety disorder. This warrants further research.
Introduction
Chronic pain is common in up to 70% of patients with depressive and anxiety disorders [1]–[9]. Chronic pain and depression most likely have a bidirectional association: depression is a predictor of persistent pain and pain is a predictor of the persistence of depression [1], [3], [10]. A possible explanation is that impaired functioning caused by pain can lead to social isolation, which in turn can lead to a negative effect on depressive symptoms, and vice versa [11], [12]. Furthermore, different brain areas, such as the amygdala and hypothalamus, play a role in both depression and pain [13], [14]. Also, when depression and chronic pain are co-morbid, recognition and treatment of depression are less effective, as patients mostly only present their physical complaints and receive treatment accordingly [1].
Most studies up to now have only considered the relationship of pain with depression, whereas its association with anxiety disorders has been less examined. It is likely that the association of pain and anxiety is equally important, as depression and anxiety commonly appear together. Pain may cause feelings of anxiety, which in turn can make one more sensitive to pain, with persistence of the pain experience as a consequence [15]. Furthermore, anxiety disorders and chronic pain share underlying cognitive and behavioural processes, such as increased attention towards threat and anxious avoidance of physical exertion [16], [17]. Fear avoidance can play a role in chronic pain, with the (acute) pain experience leading to pain catastrophising and pain-related fear which in turn will lead to greater disability and persistent pain experience [15]. Therefore, we need more comprehensive insight by studying both depression and anxiety in concert (separately and as co-morbid problems) with pain [18]–[20]. Another reason to study the cross-sectional relationship between depressive and anxiety disorders and pain is that pain also has a negative impact on the prognosis of psychopathology and psychiatric treatment outcome, with pain leading to more treatment resistance [2], [21]–[23]. Pain may be a marker of a more difficult-to-treat disorder, and lead to a longer time before remission [24].
Pain is a common presenting symptom in depression and anxiety and several studies have explored this association for specific pain symptoms, such as back pain [25]–[27] or neck pain [27], [28]. However, pain symptoms often occur in more than one location and thus may be clustered; clustering of (medically unexplained) physical symptoms was examined by Wessely et al. [29], Nimnuan et al. [30], and Fink et al. [31]. These studies found different clusters of pain symptoms, the most prominent being musculoskeletal, gastro-intestinal, and cardio-respiratory pain. Associations were found between depressive, but mostly anxiety symptoms and cardio-respiratory pain, musculoskeletal pain and gastro-intestinal pain. However, the strength of these associations and the correlation with pain-related disability has not yet been explored [32]–[34]. Therefore, this study will explore the association of clustered locations of pain (musculoskeletal, gastro-intestinal, and cardio-respiratory) with depression and anxiety, while taking severity of pain and pain-related disability into account.
We aim to examine and compare the impact of current and remitted depressive, anxiety and co-morbid disorders on different pain-variables in a large sample of individuals with depressive and/or anxiety disorders versus normal controls. We will explore if severity of depressive or anxiety symptoms is associated with severity of pain and pain-related disability, and whether these associations are stronger for certain clustered pain locations. We expect that not only a depressive disorder will have a strong association with abovementioned pain-variables, but that an anxiety disorder will show a comparably strong association, with comorbid depression and anxiety showing the strongest association.
Methods
Sample
The present study used data from the Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA): an ongoing longitudinal cohort study in which 2981 participants, recruited from the community, general practice and secondary mental health care, are monitored to investigate the long-term course and consequences of depressive and anxiety disorders. Penninx et al. [35] provide a detailed description of the NESDA study design and sampling procedures. NESDA was designed to include patients with depressive and anxiety disorders at different stages of development of their disorder. In order to achieve this, participants were recruited from the community, in primary care and in specialised mental health care [35]. At baseline, healthy controls, persons with a prior history, and persons with a current depressive and/or anxiety disorder, between 18 and 65 years old, were included. The sample was stratified for setting (community, primary care, and specialised mental health). Furthermore, the sample includes a range of psychopathology: from those without a depressive or anxiety disorder (controls) to those with a current, first or recurrent (in the past 6 months) depressive or anxiety disorder and those with a remitted disorder (at baseline, a depressive and/or anxiety disorder was diagnosed in the past, but no diagnoses were present at 6 months before baseline). The disorders included dysthymia, major depressive disorder, general anxiety disorder, panic disorder, social phobia, and agoraphobia. Exclusion criteria were not being fluent in Dutch and a primary diagnosis of psychotic, obsessive compulsive, bipolar or severe addiction disorder. The research protocol was approved by the Ethical Committee of participating universities and written informed consent was obtained from all participants. Interviews were conducted by specially trained research staff.
The sample consists of 2329 persons with a current diagnosis of depression (n = 396) or anxiety disorder (n = 543), a remitted disorder (n = 628) and 652 persons without a history of depressive and/or anxiety disorder and no current diagnosis of depression or anxiety disorder. All 2981 participants were interviewed, by specially trained clinical research staff, for depression and/or anxiety in the baseline interview using the DSM IV based Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI, version 2.1), a reliable and valid instrument for assessing depressive and anxiety disorders [36].
The baseline measurement of NESDA, collected between September 2004 and February 2007, was used for this study. Next to the structured interview to assess mental health, self-report questionnaires were used to assess physical health (such as chronic disease, pain, and severity of mental health).
Measures
Pain assessment
Pain was assessed using the 7-item Chronic Pain Grade (CPG) Scale by von Korff [37]. The CPG is a reliable and valid instrument for chronic pain populations and the general population [37], [38]. The CPG is a good instrument for measuring pain-related variables and for making a hierarchical classification of pain intensity and pain-related disability. It has good internal consistency (with a Cronbach’s alpha of 0.91) and the item-total correlations are all high, ranging from .69 to .83.
The CPG grades (chronic) pain using pain intensity and pain-related disability. Pain intensity is based on the mean of the average, worst, and present pain on a scale of 0–100. Pain–related disability is based on the mean of interference with usual activities, work/household activities, and family/social activities on a scale of 0–100, and the number of days (0–180) one is unable to carry out usual activities due to pain in the previous 6 months. To create 5 grades for chronic pain, the following calculations were used: pain intensity was divided into low intensity (score <50) and high intensity (score ≥50). To calculate the score of pain-related disability, an overall score of 0–6 was created by assigning 0–3 points for disability score (0–29 = 0; 30–49 = 1; 50–69 = 2; 70–100 = 3) and adding 0–3 points for number of disability days (0–6 days = 0; 7–14 days = 1; 15–30 days = 2; >30 days = 3). With these scores, 5 grades of chronic pain can be calculated:
grade 0 (no pain symptoms);
grade 1 (low pain intensity (<50) – low disability (<3 points));
grade 2 (high intensity (≥50) – low disability (<3 points));
grade 3 (high disability – moderately limiting (3–4 disability points, regardless of intensity));
grade 4 (high disability – severely limiting (5–6 disability points, regardless of intensity)).
Along with the CPG, we also assessed the specific pain location. To locate the specific pain location, an inventory was made, with a self-report questionnaire, of pain symptoms in the back, neck, head, stomach, joints, chest, and face. Participants could report one or more of these pain locations, and were asked which of these pain locations bothered them the most in the last six months. We then categorised these pain locations as musculoskeletal (back, neck, head, joints, face), gastro-intestinal (stomach), and cardio respiratory (chest) pain symptoms. Participants could report multiple pain symptoms across the categories.
Depression and anxiety
The presence of a depressive or anxiety disorder was established using the CIDI. In this study, psychopathology profiles were made for each participant. A participant either had no psychopathology (n = 652), a remitted disorder (depression and/or anxiety) (n = 628), a current depressive disorder (n = 396), a current anxiety disorder (n = 543) or a current co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder (n = 762) (in the past 6 months).
In addition to this categorical approach of disorders (yes/no), we also assessed severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms. Severity of depressive symptoms was assessed with the Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology-Self-Report (QIDS-SR) [39], in which no pain items are included. The QIDS-SR is the shortened version of the self-rated Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS-SR) [40] and is a 16-item questionnaire with a range of 0 to 27 with high internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.86). A score of 0–5 refers to none to mild depressive symptoms, a score of 6–10 refers to mild severity, a score of 11–15 refers to moderate severity, and a score of 16 or higher refers to (very) severe depressive symptoms. Severity of anxiety symptoms was assessed with the Beck Anxiety Inventory (BAI) [41], which also does not include any pain items. The BAI is a 27-item questionnaire ranging from 0 to 63 also with high internal consistency (Cronbach’s α = 0.92). A score of 0–9 refers to normal severity, whereas a score of 10–18 refers to mild severity, a score of 18–29 refers to moderate severity, and a score higher than 29 refers to severe anxiety symptoms [42].
Covariates
Covariates were selected a priori based on previous research on the association of depression and anxiety with pain. Socio-demographic factors included gender, age, level of education, and partner status. Furthermore, the presence of chronic diseases was taken into account as a covariate. Based on self-report during the initial interview, the presence of a chronic disease was assessed. These chronic diseases were then categorised, by a physician, into cardio respiratory disease (coronary heart disease, angina pectoris, heart failure, chronic nonspecific lung disease, stroke, hypertension), gastro-intestinal disease (diabetes, (gastro-intestinal) ulcer, ulcerative colitis or Crohn’s disease, liver cirrhosis, hepatitis) and musculoskeletal disease (arthritis, osteoarthritis, rheumatism). Because medication can have an analgesic influence on pain, the use of antidepressants and other psychotropic drugs were also selected as covariates. Also, the number of depressive episodes was taken into account as a covariate.
Statistical Analyses
All statistical analyses were performed in SPSS 19 for Windows. Descriptive analyses were used to assess baseline characteristics across the total sample. To assess the associations of type of disorder with the CPG, we used multinomial logistic regression analyses. For the pain outcome variable (the CPG) we used the group with no pain (CPG0) as a reference category. For type of disorder, the healthy control group without depression or anxiety was selected as a reference category. In this analysis we controlled for all the covariates.
We used adjusted multinomial analyses to assess the association of severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms with the outcome variable CPG, with the lowest severity category as the reference category.
Furthermore, we used four separate logistic regression analyses to examine the association of depression and/or anxiety with the outcome variable of location of pain (1. no pain, 2. musculoskeletal pain (controlling for the presence of musculoskeletal disease), 3. gastro-intestinal pain (controlling for the presence of gastro-intestinal disease), and 4. cardio respiratory pain (controlling for the presence of cardio respiratory disease)). Here also, having no depressive or anxiety disorder was used as a reference category.
Results
Table 1 presents the baseline characteristics of the total population. Of the total sample, 652 participants reported no psychopathology, and slightly less participants (628) reported a remitted depressive and/or anxiety disorder (with a mean of 1.73 depressive episodes). The least participants had a current depressive disorder (with a mean of 10.29 depressive episodes), followed by a current anxiety disorder. Most participants reported a current comorbid depressive and anxiety disorder, with a mean of almost 10 depressive episodes. 26.4% of the total sample used antidepressant medication. Of the 2981 participants, 170 (5.7%) reported no pain symptoms. Most participants (92.4%) reported having musculoskeletal pain, followed by gastro-intestinal pain (1432 participants), and cardio respiratory pain (764 participants). Table 2 shows the pain characteristics, separated in no psychopathology, remitted disorder, current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, and current depressive and anxiety disorder. Of the total sample and of each of the abovementioned groups, most participants had low intensity and low pain-related disability (CPG1), and pain of musculoskeletal origin. Especially when a depressive disorder is comorbid with an anxiety disorder, more participants report highly disabling and severely limiting pain (CPG4).
Table 1. Baseline characteristics of total NESDA sample (N = 2981).
N (%) | Mean (SD) | ||
Demographics | |||
Female gender | 1979 (66.4) | ||
Age in years | 41.9 (13.1) | ||
Level of education | Basic | 199 (6.7) | |
Intermediate | 1736 (58.2) | ||
High | 1046 (35.1) | ||
Partner or married | 2066 (69.3) | ||
Psychopathology characteristics | |||
No psychopathology | 652 (21.9) | ||
Remitted disorder | 628 (21.0) | ||
# of depressive episodes | 1.73 (5.9) | ||
Current depressive disorder | 396 (13.3) | ||
# of depressive episodes | 10.29 (71.3) | ||
Current anxiety disorder | 543 (18.2) | ||
Current depressive and anxiety disorder | 762 (25.6) | ||
# of depressive episodes | 9.88 (72.6) | ||
Severity of depression (QIDS)* | None | 1121 (37.6) | |
Mild | 820 (27.5) | ||
Moderate | 627 (21.0) | ||
(Very) Severe | 374 (12.5) | ||
Severity of anxiety (BAI)** | Normal | 1477 (49.5) | |
Mild | 758 (25.4) | ||
Moderate | 493 (16.5) | ||
Severe | 218 (7.3) | ||
Other characteristics | |||
Musculoskeletal chronic disease | 648 (21.7) | ||
Gastro-intestinal chronic disease | 335 (11.2) | ||
Cardio respiratory chronic disease | 775 (26.0) | ||
Antidepressant use | 785 (26.4) | ||
Use of other psychotropic drugs | 700 (23.5) |
*39 missing.
**35 missing.
Table 2. Baseline pain characteristics divided by psychopathology.
Total | No psychopathology | Remitteddisorder | Currentdepressivedisorder | Currentanxietydisorder | Currentdepressiveandanxietydisorder | ||
N = 2981 | N = 652 | N = 627 | N = 396 | N = 543 | N = 762 | ||
CPG* | Grade 0, N (%) | 170 (5.7) | 82 (12.6) | 33 (5.3) | 19 (4.8) | 23 (4.2) | 13 (1.7) |
Grade 1, N (%) | 1635 (54.8) | 441 (67.6) | 379 (60.4) | 194 (49.0) | 315 (58.0) | 306 (40.2) | |
Grade 2, N (%) | 605 (20.3) | 81 (12.4) | 134 (21.4) | 86 (21.7) | 118 (21.7) | 186 (24.4) | |
Grade 3, N (%) | 311 (10.4) | 29 (4.4) | 48 (7.7) | 60 (15.2) | 52 (9.6) | 122 (16.0) | |
Grade 4, N (%) | 259 (8.7) | 19 (2.9) | 33 (5.3) | 37 (9.3) | 35 (6.4) | 135 (17.7) | |
Pain location | No pain, N (%) | 170 (5.7) | 82 (12.6) | 33 (5.3) | 19 (4.8) | 23 (4.2) | 13 (1.7) |
Musculoskeletal, N (%) | 2753 (92.4) | 552 (84.7) | 586 (93.3) | 374 (94.4) | 507 (93.4) | 734 (96.3) | |
Gastro-intestinal, N (%) | 1432 (48.0) | 207 (31.7) | 250 (39.8) | 216 (54.5) | 278 (51.2) | 481 (63.1) | |
Cardio respiratory, N (%) | 764 (25.6) | 77 (11.8) | 117 (18.6) | 101 (25.5) | 156 (28.7) | 313 (41.1) |
*1 missing.
Association of depression and/or anxiety with the CPG
Table 3 shows results from the adjusted multinomial logistic regression analysis assessing the association of depression and/or anxiety with the CPG. The results show a significant association and the odds ratios (ORs) rise per CPG level. For all CPG levels, the ORs were significantly elevated compared to the reference group. Having a co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder, as compared to having no disorder, showed the strongest association (OR = 30.26; 95% CI = 12.68–72.23). Also, when compared to having no depression or anxiety, there is still a high odds of having disabling pain symptoms when the depressive or anxiety disorder is remitted (CPG1: OR = 1.87; 95% CI = 1.17–2.97; CPG4: OR = 3.53; 95% CI = 1.67–7.43). However, the confidence intervals do overlap. Therefore, four sensitivity analyses were performed, each with an other psychopathology group (remitted disorder, current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, comorbid depression and anxiety) as a reference category, in order to examine the possible differences in associations between pain and various depressive and anxiety disorder categories (Tables 4–7). With a current depressive disorder or anxiety disorder as reference group, the results show no significant differences between these disorders on the CPG. A current anxiety disorder and a current depressive disorder also show no significant difference with a remitted disorder. Only a co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder had a significantly higher association with the CPG compared to a remitted, current depressive, and current anxiety disorder. These findings were similar to those in the analysis with the reference group of healthy controls. The unadjusted results did not differ from the adjusted results.
Table 3. Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with no depression and/or anxiety disorder as a reference category.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
No psychopathology | reference | reference | reference | reference |
Remitted depression/anxiety | 1.87 (1.17–2.97)* | 3.45 (2.02–5.87)** | 3.49 (1.81–6.73)** | 3.53 (1.67–7.43)* |
Depression current | 1.35 (0.72–2.55) | 3.53 (1.76–7.08)** | 7.14 (3.28–15.54)** | 6.67 (2.81–15.88)** |
Anxiety current | 2.10 (1.25–3.54)* | 4.06 (2.26–7.30)** | 5.15 (2.57–10.31)** | 4.84 (2.22–10.57)** |
Co-morbid depression and anxiety current | 3.13 (1.56–6.25)* | 10.18 (4.87–21.26)** | 19.72 (8.77–44.35)** | 30.26 (12.68–72.23)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Table 4. Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with remitted disorder as a reference category.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
Remitted depression/anxiety | reference | reference | reference | reference |
No psychopathology | .54 (.34–.85)* | .29 (.17–.50)** | .29 (.15–.55)** | .28 (.14–.60)* |
Depression current | .72 (.39–1.36) | 1.03 (.52–2.01) | 2.04 (.98–4.25) | 1.89 (.85–4.20) |
Anxiety current | 1.13 (.64–2.00) | 1.18 (.64–2.18) | 1.47 (.74–2.94) | 1.37 (.65–2.91) |
Co-morbid depression and anxiety current | 1.68 (.84–3.36) | 2.95 (1.43–6.09)* | 5.65 (2.61–12.22)** | 8.58 (3.84–19.21)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Table 7. Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with comorbid depressive- and anxiety disorder as a reference category.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
Comorbid depression and anxiety current | reference | reference | reference | reference |
No psychopathology | .32 (.16–.64)* | .10 (.05–.21)** | .05 (.02–.11)** | .03 (.01–.08)** |
Remitted depression/anxiety | .60 (.30–1.20) | .34 (.16–.70)* | .18 (.08–.38)** | .12 (.05–.26)** |
Depression current | .43 (.21–.91)* | .35 (.16–.75)* | .36 (.16-.80)* | .22 (.10–.50)** |
Anxiety current | .67 (.33–1.39) | .40 (.19–.85)* | .26 (.12–.57)* | .16 (.07–.36)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Table 5. Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with current depressive disorder as a reference category.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
Depression current | reference | reference | reference | reference |
No psychopathology | .74 (.39–1.40) | .28 (.14–.57)** | .14 (.0–31)** | .15 (.06–.36)** |
Remitted depression/anxiety | 1.38 (.74–2.59) | .98 (.50–1.91) | .49 (.24–1.02) | .53 (.24–1.17) |
Anxiety current | 1.56 (.79–3.05) | 1.15 (.56–2.35) | .72 (.34–1.54) | .73 (.32–1.65) |
Comorbid depression and anxiety current | 2.31 (1.10–4.85)* | 2.88 (1.34–6.21)* | 2.76 (1.25–6.09)* | 4.53 (2.00–10.30)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Table 6. Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with current anxiety disorder as a reference category.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
Anxiety current | reference | reference | reference | reference |
No psychopathology | .48 (.28–.80)* | .25 (.14–.44)** | .19 (.10–.39)** | .21 (.10–.45)** |
Remitted depression/anxiety | .89 (.450–1.57) | .85 (.46–1.57) | .68 (.34–1.35) | .73 (.34–1.54) |
Depression current | .64 (.33–1.26) | .87 (.43–1.78) | 1.39 (.65–2.97) | 1.38 (.61–3.13) |
Comorbid depression and anxiety current | 1.49 (.72–3.06) | 2.51 (1.18–5.30)* | 3.83 (1.74–8.42)* | 6.25 (2.76–14.15)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Because the reference group for pain (CPG0) was small (N = 170), another sensitivity analysis was conducted where CPG0 and CPG1 were combined to form the reference category (Table 8). This analysis showed that the association between type of disorder and CPG mostly remains: as can be seen in table 8, all associations became less strong after combining CPG0 and CPG1 as a reference category, but remained significant.
Table 8. (Results from sensitivity analysis, with CPG0 and CPG1 combined) Associations of presence of current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, current co-morbid depression and anxiety and remitted depression or anxiety with the Chronic Pain Grade, with no depression and/or anxiety disorder as a reference category.
CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
No psychopathology | reference | reference | reference |
Remitted depression/anxiety | 1.99 (1.45–2.73)** | 2.01 (1.22–3.30)* | 2.03 (1.10–3.73)* |
Depression current | 2.78 (1.93–4.01)** | 5.61 (3.39–9.29)** | 5.23 (2.77–9.85)** |
Anxiety current | 2.09 (1.50–2.92)** | 2.65 (1.61–4.35)** | 2.48 (1.34–4.59)* |
Comorbid depression and anxiety current | 3.63 (2.61–5.04)** | 7.01 (4.38–11.23)** | 10.72 (6.07–18.96)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, chronic diseases, and number of depressive episodes.
Association of severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms with the CPG
Table 9 shows the association of the severity of depressive symptoms (as measured with the QIDS) and anxiety symptoms (as measured with the BAI) with the CPG. Similar to the main finding, as the severity of the depressive symptoms increases, the odds of having highly disabling and severely limiting pain increases as well. The same accounts for the association between severity of anxiety symptoms and the CPG. The unadjusted results did not differ from the adjusted results.
Table 9. Association of severity of depressive symptoms and anxiety symptoms with the Chronic Pain Grade.
CPG1a , b | CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | ||
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | ||
QIDSb | None | reference | reference | reference | reference |
Mild | 2.59 (1.55–4.34)** | 3.72 (2.13–6.49)** | 3.99 (2.13–7.49)** | 4.05 (1.99–8.23)** | |
Moderate | 1.10 (0.59–2.02) | 1.56 (.91–3.40) | 3.32 (1.62–6.80)* | 2.91 (1.31–6.48)* | |
(Very) Severe | 1.11 (.43–2.87) | 2.18 (.81–5.87) | 4.66 (1.65–13.16)* | 7.93 (2.70–23.35)** | |
BAIc | Normal | reference | reference | reference | reference |
Mild | 1.76 (.59–12.51) | 2.41 (1.36–4.29)* | 2.66 (1.42–4.97)* | 3.07 (1.54–6.12)* | |
Moderate | 2.23 (.99–5.03) | 4.22 (1.82–9.79)* | 3.89 (1.60–9.45)* | 6.69 (2.66–16.84)** | |
Severe | 2.73 (1.02–3.02)* | 6.70 (1.44–31.20)* | 8.29 (1.73–39.59)* | 13.32 (2.73–64.97)* |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, chronic diseases, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, number of depressive episodes, and severity of anxiety symptoms.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, chronic diseases, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, number of depressive episodes, and severity of depressive symptoms.
Because the reference group for pain (CPG0) was small (N = 170), a sensitivity analysis was conducted where CPG0 and CPG1 were combined to form the reference category (table 10). This analysis showed that the association found between severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms and CPG mostly remains, with more severe depressive or anxiety symptoms being more strongly associated with more disabling and limiting pain, when CPG0 and CPG1 were combined to have a larger reference group. Here also, all associations were less strong, with some associations (especially the association of severe anxiety symptoms with the CPG2 and CPG4) remaining statistically significant, while other associations (e.g. the association of mild and moderate anxiety symptoms with CPG3) becoming non-significant.
Table 10. (Results of sensitivity analysis, with CPG0 and CPG1 combined) Association of severity of depressive symptoms and anxiety symptoms with the Chronic Pain Grade.
CPG2a , b | CPG3a , b | CPG4a , b | ||
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | ||
QIDSb | None | reference | reference | reference |
Mild | 1.55 (1.18–2.02)* | 1.65 (1.11–2.46)* | 1.67 (1.00–2.80)* | |
Moderate | 1.67 (1.21–2.33)* | 3.14 (2.04–4.83)** | 2.75 (1.58–4.78)** | |
(Very) Severe | 2.05 (1.36–3.09)* | 4.37 (2.61–7.33)** | 7.42 (4.08–13.649)** | |
BAIc | Normal | reference | reference | reference |
Mild | 1.42 (1.09–1.85)* | 1.57 (1.09–2.24)* | 1.81 (1.14–2.87)* | |
Moderate | 1.99 (1.44–2.75)** | 1.83 (1.19–2.81)* | 3.15 (1.91–5.19)** | |
Severe | 2.59 (1.63–4.13)** | 3.12 (1.86–5.53)** | 5.16 (2.83–9.41)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
reference category is no pain.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, chronic diseases, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, number of depressive episodes, and severity of anxiety symptoms.
adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, chronic diseases, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, number of depressive episodes, and severity of depressive symptoms.
Association of depression and/or anxiety with musculoskeletal, gastro-intestinal, and cardio respiratory pain symptoms
Table 11 shows the multinomial logistic regression analyses assessing the association of depression and/or anxiety with three clustered pain locations. For those with pain, the highest ORs are seen in co-morbid depression and anxiety. The ORs for musculoskeletal pain range from 2.28 (95% CI = 1.53–3.42) for a depressive or anxiety disorder in remission to 3.88 (95% CI = 2.33–6.47) for a co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder. For gastro-intestinal pain, the ORs range from 1.40 (95% CI = 1.10–1.78) for a depressive or anxiety disorder in remission to 3.31 (95% CI = 2.57–4.27) for a co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder. Cardio respiratory pain shows a range in ORs from 1.74 (95% CI = 1.27–2.40) for a depressive or anxiety disorder in remission to 5.15 (95% CI = 3.80–6.98) for co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder. The unadjusted results did not differ from the adjusted results.
Table 11. Associations of remitted psychopathology, current depressive disorder, current anxiety disorder, and current co-morbid depression and anxiety with pain location, with no depression and/or anxiety as reference category.
No paina | Musculoskeletala | Gastro-intestinala | Cardio respiratorya | |
OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | OR (95% CI) | |
No psychopathology | reference | reference | reference | reference |
Remitted depression/anxiety | .47 (.30–.75)* | 2.28 (1.53–3.42)** | 1.40 (1.10–1.78)* | 1.74 (1.27–2.40)* |
Depression current | .52 (.28–.97)* | 2.64 (1.53–4.56)** | 2.43 (1.84–3.22)** | 2.63 (1.86–3.70)** |
Anxiety current | .39 (.24–.66)** | 2.29 (1.49–3.51)** | 2.08 (1.61–2.68)** | 2.96 (2.16–4.04)** |
Co-morbid depression and anxiety current | .19 (.10–.38)** | 3.88 (2.33–6.47)** | 3.31 (2.57–4.27)** | 5.15 (3.80–6.98)** |
*p<.05;
**p<.001.
a = adjusted for age, gender, level of education, partner status, antidepressant use, use of other psychotropic drugs, number of depressive episodes, and chronic disease.
Discussion
The high proportion of participants with anxiety and depressive disorders in this study reflects the sampling strategy for including sufficient numbers of respondents to examine individuals at different stages of development and severity of depression and anxiety. This study demonstrates considerable associations between presence of depressive and anxiety disorders (current and remitted) and symptom severity with different pain dimensions, namely pain-related disability, pain intensity, and the location of pain symptoms (musculoskeletal, gastro-intestinal, and cardio respiratory).
Presence and severity of depressive or anxiety disorder
Our results show that having a mood or anxiety disorder increases the odds of highly disabling and severely limiting pain. Also, the severity of the depressive and anxiety symptoms are significantly associated with pain-related disability and limiting pain, with more severe symptoms having higher odds for highly disabling and severely limiting pain.
Depressive and anxiety disorders may add to pain as they increase the likelihood of social isolation, increased attention towards threat and avoidance of physical exertion [11], [12], [16], [17]. Depression and anxiety disorders also share the same pathophysiological pathways as pain [43]–[45]. They facilitate the central modulation of the pain response, in the periaqueductal gray, amygdala, and hypothalamus [1], [13], [14], and when deficits occur in these areas, modulation of signals from the body are disturbed, leading to a more severe experience of pain. Although these brain areas all play a role in depression, anxiety, and pain, not every individual responds the same to pain stimuli [46]–[48]. Some individuals are more sensitive to pain than others. The use of EEG may help in identifying neuronal markers for sensitivity to pain [46], and whether there are differences between depressive and anxious individuals. Furthermore, depression and anxiety induce stress and increases the production of pro-inflammatory cytokines [49]–[51], which may increase pain [52], [53]. The finding showing higher pain-related disability in co-morbid depression and anxiety in our study is similar to findings from the STAR*D studies [54]–[56].
Depressive or anxiety disorder in remission
Regarding the association of a remitted disorder and pain, we expected persons with remitted depression or anxiety to have similar pain symptoms as controls without depression or anxiety. However, this is not the case. Persons with a remitted depressive or anxiety disorder still showed high odds on the pain outcomes when compared to those that have no such disorder. This is remarkable, because this means that having a remitted disorder is not the same as having no disorder with regards to pain. This raises several questions.
First, pain symptoms may be residual symptoms in depressive and anxiety disorder. This finding may suggest that pain in patients with remitted depressive or anxiety disorder might be indicative of a risk for recurrence, as disability in life (e.g. disability to fulfil his or her role at home) is an important risk factor for the recurrence of anxiety disorders [57], and our results show that those with a remitted diagnosis still have high odds of having pain symptoms and pain-related disability.
Another explanation for the high odds of pain symptoms in remitted depression or anxiety might be that treatment, if it was provided, for the depressive or anxiety disorder is not effective for pain symptoms, or treatment should be different when pain is co-morbid with the depressive or anxiety disorder. For example, it has been suggested that patients with depression and pain are a distinctively other group of patients than those with depression without pain, with the former having a focus on health and the latter having a focus on a negative view of the self [58], [59]. If that is the case, the treatment should be different for depressive disorder with pain and depressive disorder without pain. The same could possibly apply to patients with an anxiety disorder with or without pain. This finding warrants further research, to examine if having a depressive or anxiety disorder in remission may be a possible risk factor for subsequent long lasting chronic pain.
Pain location
Of the total sample, 92.4% reported pain symptoms of musculoskeletal nature, followed by 48% reporting gastro-intestinal pain and 25.6% of cardio respiratory pain. Because musculoskeletal pain has by far the highest prevalence in this study, we expected that this pain location would have the highest association with depression and anxiety. However, this expectation was not confirmed. Our findings show that those with a current depressive disorder or a remitted depressive or anxiety disorder have high odds for having musculoskeletal pain, but the odds for having pain of cardio respiratory origin are also large when compared to having no depressive or anxiety disorder. Furthermore, persons having a current anxiety or co-morbid depressive and anxiety disorder show high odds for having cardio respiratory pain. These findings remain after adjustment for chronic cardio respiratory illness.
In a review by Celano & Huffman [60], depressive disorder was associated with cardiac disease, such as coronary artery disease. This also applies to anxiety which appears to be a risk factor for coronary heart disease and cardiac mortality [61]. The finding that anxiety shows such high odds for cardio respiratory pain symptoms, even when we controlled for cardio respiratory disease, could be due to the fact that anxious patients with chest pain are more sensitive to bodily sensations [62]; in that case, the experience of pain would be centrally modulated in such a way as to elevate the odds for experiencing pain. However, another explanation might be possible as well; stress induced anxiety has an elevating effect on cytokines [49], and elevated cytokines lead to pain symptoms. This might explain our findings.
In the STAR*D study, depressed patients (with less sleep quality and sympathetic arousal) showed an association with higher cardiac risk, which may be similar to our findings [63] whereby having a depressive disorder had higher odds for having cardio respiratory pain when compared to having no depressive or anxiety disorder. Even when we controlled for having a chronic disease of cardio respiratory origin, the association remained strong and significant. Previous research showed that having a mental illness is a possible risk factor for cardiovascular disease [64], [65]. Our finding that a depression/anxiety, whether or not in remission, shows a strong association with cardiac pain is worth exploring in further longitudinal research to explore a possible causal relation of depression and/or anxiety (current or in remission) with cardiac disease, of which cardio respiratory pain might be an early indicator.
Strengths of the study
A strength of this study is the large sample size. Also, because patients with a depressive or anxiety disorder often report pain in multiple locations, the categorisation of pain locations makes these results clinically relevant and widely applicable. Moreover, this study not only examines the association of pain with depressive or anxiety disorder, but also with co-morbid depression and anxiety, as well as with remitted disorders. Additionally, in the analyses of the pain symptoms, the no pain group was the reference category which is new compared to earlier studies that compared low pain with high pain – which is subject to interpretation bias as pain is a subjective experience. In our study, we had a healthy control group with no pain in which better contrasts could be made with those who had pain.
Limitations
This study also has some limitations. First, it is not possible to make inferences about causality because this was a cross-sectional observational study. Second, some of the subgroups of our sample were smaller than the other groups, such as those with no pain symptoms (CPG0, N = 170). However, a sensitivity analysis revealed that the association between severity of depressive and anxiety symptoms and CPG mostly remains, with more severe depressive or anxiety symptoms being more strongly associated with more disabling and limiting pain when CPG0 and CPG1 were combined to have a larger reference group. Therefore, these associations can be considered valid and of clinical relevance as they indicate a clear difference in association with depression or anxiety between patients with and without pain. Another possible limitation is the self-reporting of physical illness, which might lead to overreporting or underreporting of chronic physical illness; however, a study by Kriegsman et al. [66] shows that patients report their physical illness fairly accurately when compared to the reports of their general practitioner, even when taking depressive symptomatology into account. Furthermore, no information was available whether a physical illness was organic or functional, which may have its effect on pain. For example, individuals with an organic disease describe their pain as consistent, whereas those without an organic disease describe their pain as variable and diffuse [67]. Also, PTSD has been linked to increased risk for pain [68], [69]. Therefore, future research that examines the association of anxiety disorders with pain should also include PTSD.
Conclusion
This study shows that depressive and anxiety disorders have a similar and very strong association with the CPG (which includes pain-related disability and pain intensity) and musculoskeletal pain, cardio respiratory pain, and gastro-intestinal pain compared to a control group without depressive or anxiety disorder. Depression and anxiety share the same pathophysiological pathways as pain and can have a reciprocal effect on each other, which could explain these associations. Moreover, even a remitted disorder has a strong association with pain. This might mean that patients with depression or anxiety and pain are a different group and need different treatment than patients that do not have pain accompanying their depression or anxiety. Depression and anxiety also have a strong association with cardio respiratory pain, and this association remained after correction for cardiovascular or respiratory illness. This strong association between depression/anxiety (current or in remission) with cardio respiratory pain is an interesting finding, which warrants further longitudinal research to examine a possible causal relation of cardiac pain and a mental disorder (current or in remission) with cardiac disease.
Data Availability
The authors confirm that, for approved reasons, some access restrictions apply to the data underlying the findings. Researchers can submit a research plan, which describes the background en methods of a proposed research question, and a request for specific data of the NESDA database to answer the research question. Information about NESDA data can be requested by contacting the principal investigator of NESDA: Prof. Dr. Brenda Penninx: b.penninx@vumc.nl.
Funding Statement
The infrastructure for the NESDA study is funded through the Geestkracht program of the Netherlands Organisation for Health Research and Development (Zon-MW, grant number 10-000-1002) and is supported by participating universities and mental health care organisations (VU University Medical Center, GGZ inGeest, Arkin, Leiden University Medical Center, GGZ Rivierduinen, University Medical Center Groningen, Lentis, GGZ Friesland, GGZ Drenthe, IQ Healthcare, Netherlands Institute for Health Services Research [NIVEL], and the Netherlands Institute of Mental Health and Addiction [Trimbos]. The funders had no role in study design, data collection and analysis, decision to publish, or preparation of the manuscript.
References
- 1. Bair MJ, Robinson RL, Katon W, Kroenke K (2003) Depression and pain comorbidity: a literature review. Arch Intern Med 163: 2433–2445. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 2. Demyttenaere K, Bruffaerts R, Lee S, Posada-Villa J, Kovess V, et al. (2007) Mental disorders among persons with chronic back or neck pain: results from the World Mental Health Surveys. Pain 129: 332–342. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 3. Gureje O, Von Korff M, Kola L, Demyttenaere K, He Y, et al. (2008) The relation between multiple pains and mental disorders: results from the World Mental Health Surveys. Pain 135: 82–91. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 4. Gureje O, Von Korff M, Simon GE, Gater R (1998) Persistent pain and well-being: a World Health Organization Study in Primary Care. JAMA 280: 147–151. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 5. Means-Christensen AJ, Roy-Byrne PP, Sherbourne CD, Craske MG, Stein MB (2008) Relationships among pain, anxiety, and depression in primary care. Depress Anxiety 25: 593–600. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 6. Stahl S, Briley M (2004) Understanding pain in depression. Hum Psychopharmacol 19: S9–S13. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 7. Wise TN, Fishbain DA, Holder-Perkins V (2007) Painful physical symptoms in depression: a clinical challenge. Pain Med 8: S75–82. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 8. Burloux G, Forestier P, Dalery J, Guyotat J (1989) Chronic pain and posttraumatic stress disorders. Psychother Psychosom 52: 119–124. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 9. Ayuso Mateos JL, Bayon Perez C, Santo-Domingo Carrasco J, Olivares D (1989) Atypical chest pain and panic disorder. Psychother Psychosom 52: 92–95. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 10. Ohayon MM, Schatzberg AF (2003) Using chronic pain to predict depressive morbidity in the general population. Arch Gen Psychiatry 60: 39–47. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 11. Saito T, Kai I, Takizawa A (2012) Effects of a program to prevent social isolation on loneliness, depression, and subjective well-being of older adults: a randomized trial among older migrants in Japan. Arch Gerontol Geriatr 55: 539–547. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 12. Jang Y, Haley WE, Small BJ, Mortimer JA (2002) The role of mastery and social resources in the associations between disability and depression in later life. Gerontologist 42: 807–813. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 13. Ossipov MH, Dussor GO, Porreca F (2010) Central modulation of pain. J Clin Invest 120: 3779–3787. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 14. Millan MJ (2002) Descending control of pain. Prog Neurobiol 66: 355–474. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 15. Vlaeyen JW, Linton SJ (2000) Fear-avoidance and its consequences in chronic musculoskeletal pain: a state of the art. Pain 85: 317–332. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 16. Asmundson GJ, Katz J (2009) Understanding the co-occurrence of anxiety disorders and chronic pain: state-of-the-art. Depress Anxiety 26: 888–901. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 17. Sareen J, Cox BJ, Clara I, Asmundson GJ (2005) The relationship between anxiety disorders and physical disorders in the U.S. National Comorbidity Survey. Depress Anxiety 21: 193–202. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 18. McWilliams LA, Cox BJ, Enns MW (2003) Mood and anxiety disorders associated with chronic pain: an examination in a nationally representative sample. Pain 106: 127–133. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 19. Beesdo K, Jacobi F, Hoyer J, Low NC, Hofler M, et al. (2010) Pain associated with specific anxiety and depressive disorders in a nationally representative population sample. Soc Psychiatry Psychiatr Epidemiol 45: 89–104. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 20. Gerhardt A, Hartmann M, Schuller-Roma B, Blumenstiel K, Bieber C, et al. (2011) The prevalence and type of Axis-I and Axis-II mental disorders in subjects with non-specific chronic back pain: results from a population-based study. Pain Med 12: 1231–1240. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 21. Gerrits MM, Vogelzangs N, van Oppen P, van Marwijk HW, van der Horst H, et al. (2012) Impact of pain on the course of depressive and anxiety disorders. Pain 153: 429–436. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 22. Papakostas GI, Petersen T, Denninger J, Sonawalla SB, Mahal Y, et al. (2003) Somatic symptoms in treatment-resistant depression. Psychiatry Res 118: 39–45. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 23. Teh CF, Morone NE, Karp JF, Belnap BH, Zhu F, et al. (2009) Pain interference impacts response to treatment for anxiety disorders. Depress Anxiety 26: 222–228. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 24. Karp JF, Scott J, Houck P, Reynolds CF 3rd, Kupfer DJ, et al. (2005) Pain predicts longer time to remission during treatment of recurrent depression. J Clin Psychiatry 66: 591–597. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 25. Gilkey DP, Keefe TJ, Peel JL, Kassab OM, Kennedy CA (2010) Risk factors associated with back pain: a cross-sectional study of 963 college students. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 33: 88–95. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 26. Janwantanakul P, Sitthipornvorakul E, Paksaichol A (2012) Risk factors for the onset of nonspecific low back pain in office workers: a systematic review of prospective cohort studies. J Manipulative Physiol Ther 35: 568–577. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 27. Kindler LL, Jones KD, Perrin N, Bennett RM (2010) Risk factors predicting the development of widespread pain from chronic back or neck pain. J Pain 11: 1320–1328. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 28. Croft PR, Lewis M, Papageorgiou AC, Thomas E, Jayson MI, et al. (2001) Risk factors for neck pain: a longitudinal study in the general population. Pain 93: 317–325. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 29. Wessely S, Nimnuan C, Sharpe M (1999) Functional somatic syndromes: one or many? Lancet 354: 936–939. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 30. Nimnuan C, Hotopf M, Wessely S (2001) Medically unexplained symptoms: an epidemiological study in seven specialities. J Psychosom Res 51: 361–367. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 31. Fink P, Toft T, Hansen MS, Ornbol E, Olesen F (2007) Symptoms and syndromes of bodily distress: an exploratory study of 978 internal medical, neurological, and primary care patients. Psychosom Med 69: 30–39. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 32. Lucchetti G, Oliveira AB, Mercante JP, Peres MF (2012) Anxiety and fear-avoidance in musculoskeletal pain. Curr Pain Headache Rep 16: 399–406. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 33. Walter SA, Jones MP, Talley NJ, Kjellstrom L, Nyhlin H, et al. (2013) Abdominal pain is associated with anxiety and depression scores in a sample of the general adult population with no signs of organic gastrointestinal disease. Neurogastroenterol Motil 25: 741–e576. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 34. Shahid M, Rehmani R, Khan MM (2004) Anxiety and depression among young adults with chest pain. J Coll Physicians Surg Pak 14: 700. [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 35. Penninx BW, Beekman AT, Smit JH, Zitman FG, Nolen WA, et al. (2008) The Netherlands Study of Depression and Anxiety (NESDA): rationale, objectives and methods. Int J Methods Psychiatr Res 17: 121–140. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 36. Wittchen HU (1994) Reliability and validity studies of the WHO–Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI): a critical review. J Psychiatr Res 28: 57–84. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 37. Von Korff M, Ormel J, Keefe FJ, Dworkin SF (1992) Grading the severity of chronic pain. Pain 50: 133–149. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 38. Smith BH, Penny KI, Purves AM, Munro C, Wilson B, et al. (1997) The Chronic Pain Grade questionnaire: validation and reliability in postal research. Pain 71: 141–147. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 39. Rush AJ, Trivedi MH, Ibrahim HM, Carmody TJ, Arnow B, et al. (2003) The 16-Item Quick Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (QIDS), clinician rating (QIDS-C), and self-report (QIDS-SR): a psychometric evaluation in patients with chronic major depression. Biol Psychiatry 54: 573–583. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 40. Rush AJ, Gullion CM, Basco MR, Jarrett RB, Trivedi MH (1996) The Inventory of Depressive Symptomatology (IDS): psychometric properties. Psychol Med 26: 477–486. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 41. Beck AT, Epstein N, Brown G, Steer RA (1988) An inventory for measuring clinical anxiety: psychometric properties. J Consult Clin Psychol 56: 893–897. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 42. Kabacoff RI, Segal DL, Hersen M, Van Hasselt VB (1997) Psychometric properties and diagnostic utility of the Beck Anxiety Inventory and the State-Trait Anxiety Inventory with older adult psychiatric outpatients. J Anxiety Disord 11: 33–47. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 43. Bair MJ, Robinson RL, Eckert GJ, Stang PE, Croghan TW, et al. (2004) Impact of pain on depression treatment response in primary care. Psychosom Med 66: 17–22. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 44. Campbell LC, Clauw DJ, Keefe FJ (2003) Persistent pain and depression: a biopsychosocial perspective. Biol Psychiatry 54: 399–409. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 45. Maes M, Yirmyia R, Noraberg J, Brene S, Hibbeln J, et al. (2009) The inflammatory & neurodegenerative (I&ND) hypothesis of depression: leads for future research and new drug developments in depression. Metab Brain Dis 24: 27–53. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 46. Schulz E, Zherdin A, Tiemann L, Plant C, Ploner M (2012) Decoding an individual’s sensitivity to pain from the multivariate analysis of EEG data. Cereb Cortex 22: 1118–1123. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 47. Mogil JS (1999) The genetic mediation of individual differences in sensitivity to pain and its inhibition. Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A 96: 7744–7751. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 48. Ziv M, Tomer R, Defrin R, Hendler T (2010) Individual sensitivity to pain expectancy is related to differential activation of the hippocampus and amygdala. Hum Brain Mapp 31: 326–338. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 49. Maes M, Song C, Lin A, De Jongh R, Van Gastel A, et al. (1998) The effects of psychological stress on humans: increased production of pro-inflammatory cytokines and a Th1-like response in stress-induced anxiety. Cytokine 10: 313–318. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 50. Felger JC, Lotrich FE (2013) Inflammatory cytokines in depression: neurobiological mechanisms and therapeutic implications. Neuroscience 246: 199–229. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 51. Sharpley CF, Agnew LL (2011) Cytokines and depression: findings, issues, and treatment implications. Rev Neurosci 22: 295–302. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 52.de Oliveira CM, Sakata RK, Issy AM, Gerola LR, Salomao R (2011) Cytokines and pain. Rev Bras Anestesiol 61: 255–259, 260–255, 137–242. [DOI] [PubMed]
- 53.Shubayev VI, Kato K, Myers RR (2010) Cytokines in Pain. In: Kruger L, Light AR, editors. Translational Pain Research: From Mouse to Man. Boca Raton, FL: Llc. [PubMed]
- 54. Fava M, Alpert JE, Carmin CN, Wisniewski SR, Trivedi MH, et al. (2004) Clinical correlates and symptom patterns of anxious depression among patients with major depressive disorder in STAR*D. Psychol Med 34: 1299–1308. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 55. Fava M, Rush AJ, Alpert JE, Carmin CN, Balasubramani GK, et al. (2006) What clinical and symptom features and comorbid disorders characterize outpatients with anxious major depressive disorder: a replication and extension. Can J Psychiatry 51: 823–835. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 56. Fava M, Rush AJ, Alpert JE, Balasubramani GK, Wisniewski SR, et al. (2008) Difference in treatment outcome in outpatients with anxious versus nonanxious depression: a STAR*D report. Am J Psychiatry 165: 342–351. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 57. Scholten WD, Batelaan NM, van Balkom AJ, Wjh Penninx B, Smit JH, et al. (2013) Recurrence of anxiety disorders and its predictors. J Affect Disord 147: 180–185. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 58. Pincus T, Williams A (1999) Models and measurements of depression in chronic pain. J Psychosom Res 47: 211–219. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 59. Tossani E (2013) The concept of mental pain. Psychother Psychosom 82: 67–73. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 60. Celano CM, Huffman JC (2011) Depression and cardiac disease: a review. Cardiol Rev 19: 130–142. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 61. Roest AM, Martens EJ, de Jonge P, Denollet J (2010) Anxiety and risk of incident coronary heart disease: a meta-analysis. J Am Coll Cardiol 56: 38–46. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 62. Cheng C, Wong WM, Lai KC, Wong BC, Hu WH, et al. (2003) Psychosocial factors in patients with noncardiac chest pain. Psychosom Med 65: 443–449. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 63. Fraguas R Jr, Iosifescu DV, Alpert J, Wisniewski SR, Barkin JL, et al. (2007) Major depressive disorder and comorbid cardiac disease: is there a depressive subtype with greater cardiovascular morbidity? Results from the STAR*D study. Psychosomatics 48: 418–425. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 64. Gladigau EL, Fazio TN, Hannam JP, Dawson LM, Jones SG (2014) Increased cardiovascular risk in patients with severe mental illness. Intern Med J 44: 65–69. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 65.Nielsen TJ, Vestergaard M, Christensen B, Christensen KS, Larsen KK (2013) Mental health status and risk of new cardiovascular events or death in patients with myocardial infarction: a population-based cohort study. BMJ Open 3. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed]
- 66. Kriegsman DM, Penninx BW, van Eijk JT, Boeke AJ, Deeg DJ (1996) Self-reports and general practitioner information on the presence of chronic diseases in community dwelling elderly. A study on the accuracy of patients’ self-reports and on determinants of inaccuracy. J Clin Epidemiol 49: 1407–1417. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 67. Leavitt F, Garron DC, D'Angelo CM, McNeill TW (1979) Low back pain in patients with and without demonstrable organic disease. Pain 6: 191–200. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 68. Beck JG, Clapp JD (2011) A different kind of co-morbidity: Understanding posttraumatic stress disorder and chronic pain. Psychol Trauma 3: 101–108. [DOI] [PMC free article] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
- 69. Roth RS, Geisser ME, Bates R (2008) The relation of post-traumatic stress symptoms to depression and pain in patients with accident-related chronic pain. J Pain 9: 588–596. [DOI] [PubMed] [Google Scholar]
Associated Data
This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.
Data Availability Statement
The authors confirm that, for approved reasons, some access restrictions apply to the data underlying the findings. Researchers can submit a research plan, which describes the background en methods of a proposed research question, and a request for specific data of the NESDA database to answer the research question. Information about NESDA data can be requested by contacting the principal investigator of NESDA: Prof. Dr. Brenda Penninx: b.penninx@vumc.nl.