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. 2017 Dec 4;9:394. doi: 10.3389/fnagi.2017.00394

Table 2.

Studies investigating the association between depression and Parkinson’s disease.

Study Study design Main results
Shiba et al. (2000) Prospective, case-control, USA Frequency of depression is higher in PD than controls. Depression may precede PD motor symptoms.
Schuurman et al. (2002) Retrospective, case-control, Netherlands Strong positive association between depression and subsequent incidence of PD.
Leentjens et al. (2003b) Prospective, case-control, Netherlands Depression precedes PD. The average time-span between the first episode of depression and the diagnosis of PD was 10 years.
Fang et al. (2010) Case-control, USA Positive association between depression and a higher subsequent risk of PD. Depression was detected more than 15 years before the diagnosis of PD.
Jacob et al. (2010) Retrospective, case-control, USA Positive association between depression and subsequent risk of PD in men but not women.
Shen et al. (2013) Retrospective, case-control Patients with depression were 3.24 times more likely to develop PD.
Gustafsson et al. (2015) Prospective, case-control Positive association between depression and subsequent risk of PD. Depression may predate two decades before onset of PD.