Levis, Brooke; Benedetti, Andrea; Ioannidis, John PA; Sun, Ying; Negeri, Zelalem; He, Chen; Wu, Yin; Krishnan, Ankur; Bhandari, Parash Mani; Neupane, Dipika; +66 more... Imran, Mahrukh; Rice, Danielle B; Riehm, Kira E; Saadat, Nazanin; Azar, Marleine; Boruff, Jill; Cuijpers, Pim; Gilbody, Simon; Kloda, Lorie A; McMillan, Dean; Patten, Scott B; Shrier, Ian; Ziegelstein, Roy C; Alamri, Sultan H; Amtmann, Dagmar; Ayalon, Liat; Baradaran, Hamid R; Beraldi, Anna; Bernstein, Charles N; Bhana, Arvin; Bombardier, Charles H; Carter, Gregory; Chagas, Marcos H; Chibanda, Dixon; Clover, Kerrie; Conwell, Yeates; Diez-Quevedo, Crisanto; Fann, Jesse R; Fischer, Felix H; Gholizadeh, Leila; Gibson, Lorna J; Green, Eric P; Greeno, Catherine G; Hall, Brian J; Haroz, Emily E; Ismail, Khalida; Jetté, Nathalie; Khamseh, Mohammad E; Kwan, Yunxin; Lara, Maria Asunción; Liu, Shen-Ing; Loureiro, Sonia R; Löwe, Bernd; Marrie, Ruth Ann; Marsh, Laura; McGuire, Anthony; Muramatsu, Kumiko; Navarrete, Laura; Osório, Flávia L; Petersen, Inge; Picardi, Angelo; Pugh, Stephanie L; Quinn, Terence J; Rooney, Alasdair G; Shinn, Eileen H; Sidebottom, Abbey; Spangenberg, Lena; Tan, Pei Lin Lynnette; Taylor-Rowan, Martin; Turner, Alyna; van Weert, Henk C; Vöhringer, Paul A; Wagner, Lynne I; White, Jennifer; Winkley, Kirsty; Thombs, Brett D; (2020) Patient Health Questionnaire-9 scores do not accurately estimate depression prevalence: individual participant data meta-analysis. JOURNAL OF CLINICAL EPIDEMIOLOGY, 122. 115-128.e1. ISSN 0895-4356 DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2020.02.002
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Abstract
OBJECTIVES: Depression symptom questionnaires are not for diagnostic classification. Patient Health Questionnaire-9 (PHQ-9) scores ≥10 are nonetheless often used to estimate depression prevalence. We compared PHQ-9 ≥10 prevalence to Structured Clinical Interview for Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (SCID) major depression prevalence and assessed whether an alternative PHQ-9 cutoff could more accurately estimate prevalence. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Individual participant data meta-analysis of datasets comparing PHQ-9 scores to SCID major depression status. RESULTS: A total of 9,242 participants (1,389 SCID major depression cases) from 44 primary studies were included. Pooled PHQ-9 ≥10 prevalence was 24.6% (95% confidence interval [CI]: 20.8%, 28.9%); pooled SCID major depression prevalence was 12.1% (95% CI: 9.6%, 15.2%); and pooled difference was 11.9% (95% CI: 9.3%, 14.6%). The mean study-level PHQ-9 ≥10 to SCID-based prevalence ratio was 2.5 times. PHQ-9 ≥14 and the PHQ-9 diagnostic algorithm provided prevalence closest to SCID major depression prevalence, but study-level prevalence differed from SCID-based prevalence by an average absolute difference of 4.8% for PHQ-9 ≥14 (95% prediction interval: -13.6%, 14.5%) and 5.6% for the PHQ-9 diagnostic algorithm (95% prediction interval: -16.4%, 15.0%). CONCLUSION: PHQ-9 ≥10 substantially overestimates depression prevalence. There is too much heterogeneity to correct statistically in individual studies.
Item Type | Article |
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Faculty and Department |
Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Population Health (2012- ) Faculty of Epidemiology and Population Health > Dept of Infectious Disease Epidemiology (-2023) |
PubMed ID | 32105798 |
Elements ID | 145228 |
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