2134/27783 Kim L. Lavoie Kim L. Lavoie Nicola Paine Nicola Paine Roxanne Pelletier Roxanne Pelletier Andre Arsenault Andre Arsenault Jean G. Diodati Jean G. Diodati Tavis S. Campbell Tavis S. Campbell Louise Pilote Louise Pilote Simon L. Bacon Simon L. Bacon Relationship between antidepressant therapy and risk for cardiovascular events in patients with and without cardiovascular disease Loughborough University 2017 Antidepressant treatment Depression Cardiovascular disease Major adverse cardiovascular events Education Medical and Health Sciences not elsewhere classified 2017-12-14 11:41:22 Journal contribution https://repository.lboro.ac.uk/articles/journal_contribution/Relationship_between_antidepressant_therapy_and_risk_for_cardiovascular_events_in_patients_with_and_without_cardiovascular_disease/9619901 Objective: The American Heart Association has endorsed depression as a cardiac risk factor and recommends screening as part of routine practice. This has been met with controversy due to inconsistencies in the data linking depression treatment to better cardiovascular outcomes. Our objective was to prospectively assess the association between depression treatment (defined as being prescribed antidepressant medication) and major adverse cardiovascular events (MACE) in patients referred for exercise stress tests. Methods: 2385 consecutive patients presenting for myocardial perfusion exercise stress tests underwent a sociodemographic, medical, and psychiatric interview (PRIME-MD) and completed the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI). History of CVD and antidepressant use was self-reported and verified via chart review. Participants followed over an 8.8 year follow-up, and information regarding MACE incidence (including cardiac mortality, non-fatal myocardial infarction, revascularization procedures, cerebrovascular events) was obtained from provincial administrative databases. Results: 8% (n=190) of the sample were taking antidepressants at baseline, 41% (n=916) had a history of CVD, and 38.7% (n=921) had depression according to the PRIME-MD or BDI. Antidepressant treatment was associated with a 30% reduced risk of MACE (HR=0.697; 95%CI=0.504-0.964; p=.029). A 46% reduction in risk was associated with antidepressant treatment among those without CVD (HR=0.542; 95%CI=0.299-0.981; p=.043). In depressed patients, a 33% reduction in risk of MACE associated with antidepressant use was seen (adjusted HR=0.674; 95%CI=0.440-1.033; p=.07). Conclusions: Antidepressants may be cardio-protective among patients presenting for stress testing independent of risk factors including CVD and depression. Results support treating depression with antidepressants in this population to reduce risk of MACE.