Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London
Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry, University of Manchester
Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Research Centre, Institute of Psychiatry, King's College, London, UK
Correspondence: Dr Eric Fombonne, Institute of Psychiatry, De Crespigny Park, Denmark Hill, London SE5 8AF, UK
Declaration of interest This study was funded by a special grant from the Medical Research Council.
See editorial, pp.
189190, this issue.
See part I, pp.
210217, this issue.
ABSTRACT
Background Strong links exist between juvenile and adult depression, but comorbid conduct disorder may be associated with worse adult social difficulties.
Aims To test the impact of comorbid conduct disorder on social adjustment and dysfunction, suicidality and criminality of adults who had had depression as youths.
Method Subjects (n=149) assessed at the Maudsley Hospital in 1970-1983 and meeting DSM-IV criteria for major depressive disorder with (CD-MDD; n=53) or without (MDD; n=96) conduct disorder were interviewed 20 years later. Data were collected on lifetime psychiatric disorders and adult social/personality functioning. Death certificates and criminal records were obtained.
Results The suicide risk was 2.45%, and 44.3% of the sample had attempted suicide once in their lives. Compared with the MDD group, the CD-MDD group had higher rates of suicidal behaviours and criminal offences, and exhibited more pervasive social dysfunction.
Conclusions Adolescent depression is associated with raised risks of adult suicidality and with persistent interpersonal difficulties. Youths with CD-MDD show more severe and pervasive social dysfunction.
Long-term follow-up studies of juvenile depression have emphasised the increased risk of adult major depression (Harrington et al, 1990; Rao et al, 1995; Pine et al, 1998; Weissman et al, 1999; Fombonne et al, 2001, this issue). This study specifically investigated the impact of comorbid conduct disorder on psychiatric outcomes in adult life following an index episode of major depression in childhood or adolescence. In the first report (Fombonne et al, 2001, this issue), we found that relapse rates for adult major depression were high and unaffected by comorbidity status. However, significantly increased rates of alcoholism, drug misuse and dependence, and antisocial personality were found in the comorbid group. This study examines other adult outcomes with respect to suicidality over the life span, adult social adjustment, social and personality dysfunction, and criminality in the long term. The hypothesis was that youths with depression and comorbid conduct disorder would have worse adult outcomes than their counterparts with depression but without conduct disorder.
METHOD
Participants
Details of the participant selection process are provided elsewhere
(Fombonne et al, 2001,
this issue). In brief, 245 patients who attended the Maudsley Hospital in
London between 1970 and 1983 were selected as they met DSM-IV criteria
(American Psychiatric Association,
1994) for major depressive disorder (MDD) either with
(n=97) or without (n=148) conduct disorder. These
individuals were traced for follow-up interview. Eight had died during the
follow-up interval and 48 could not be traced despite repeated attempts. Of
the remaining 189 subjects, 40 either refused to be interviewed or repeatedly
defaulted on appointments made by interviewers. The remaining 149 individuals
were successfully interviewed. No association was found between interview
status and baseline clinical features within each diagnostic group. Data
collection procedures have been reported earlier
(Fombonne et al, 2001, this issue).
Measures
Childhood measures
Maudsley item sheet database. Clinical data have been recorded
over time in the Maudsley item sheet database. Scale scores were constructed
to assess specific dimensions of psychopathology at presentation. The
suicidality item suicidal ideas, attempt or threat was also used
to describe patient status at referral (see
Fombonne et al, 2001,
this issue, Table 2).
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Ratings of medical notes. All medical, social, educational and psychological data concerning the participants were extracted on an ad hoc questionnaire. As neither the item sheet measure of suicidality nor the relevant DSM-IV diagnostic criterion for MDD differentiated suicidal cognitions or threats from actual suicidal attempts, a separate rating of suicide attempt was made allowing such distinction. For this rating, any occurrence of suicidal attempt either before initial presentation, at initial assessment or during the later course of the index episode counted towards a positive rating. This rating is used hereafter as an index of childhood suicidality.
Adult follow-up measures
Schedule for Affective Disorders and Schizophrenia-Lifetime
version. Lifetime rates of specific psychiatric disorders were measured
with a revised semi-structured version of the Schedule for Affective Disorders
and Schizophrenia-Lifetime version (SADS-L;
Harrington et al,
1988). To maintain blindness during the assessment, all interviews
started with the SADS-L focusing on life after the respondent's 17th birthday.
The SADS-L included a question on the occurrence of suicide attempts since age
17 years, which is used subsequently as an index of suicidality in adult
life.
Adult Personality Functioning Assessment. The Adult Personality Functioning Assessment (APFA) is an investigator-based interview devised to assess dysfunction in six key domains of adult life: work, love relationships, friendships, non-intimate social contacts, negotiations and everyday coping (Hill et al, 1989). Ratings were made for a baseline period (age 21-30 years) and when applicable (i.e. for subjects aged over 30 years) for the current (preceding 5 years) period. Each domain was scored on a sixpoint scale ranging from 0 (unusually effective, substantially above average) to 5 (failure of role performance). A rating for each domain was reached in reference to explicit coding procedures and to a dictionary. Ratings from 0 to 2 are within the normal range, a 0 rating signalling particularly good functioning and a 2 rating indicating some difficulties on a background of generally satisfactory functioning. Ratings of 3 or more are indicative of dysfunction and major problems, with higher scores indicating more serious and pervasive dysfunction. For each domain, the principal type of dysfunction (discordance/aggression v. avoidance/apathy) was noted. The APFA was administered after the SADS-L interview in order to identify any period of the respondent's life where functioning might have been altered by psychiatric symptoms or disorders. When applicable, these periods were noted and ratings were focused on periods free from frank psychiatric disorder. The scores for the six domains were combined into a total score, a score of 16 or greater indicating generalised dysfunction. Further details on the development and properties of the APFA can be found elsewhere (Hill et al, 1989, 1995). The subject version of the APFA was used except in a few cases when interviews were carried out with relatives using the informant version. After each interview a detailed vignette was written, which was independently rated by the first author and the interviewers, blind to the original childhood diagnosis and to other followup data. Discrepancies were resolved through discussion and consensus. Rating meetings were organised throughout the period of collection of data to minimise interviewer drift in the administration and rating of the schedule.
Criminal and death records. Criminal records were accessed from the Central Criminal Records Office at the Home Office in London. As data on court appearances are usually several months in arrears, criminal history data on the participants were updated at the end of the study. Criminal history was coded with the standard list of offences of the Offenders Index. For these analyses, minor offences (police cautions and minor crimes such as traffic offences) and convictions before the 17th birthday were excluded. Death records were obtained on eight individuals who had died during the follow-up interval.
Interrater reliability
Excellent reliability was obtained for SADS-L ratings of adult suicide
attempts (=0.94). Reliability for other psychiatric outcomes has
already been reported (Fombonne et
al, 2001, this issue). Interrater reliability for APFA
ratings was very good for five domains (work, 0.904; love relationships,
0.858; friendships, 0.871; non-intimate social contacts, 0.842; negotiations,
0.813) and good for the sixth domain (everyday coping, 0.729). Consistent with
published data on the reliability of APFA scores
(Hill et al, 1989),
the intraclass correlation coefficient (ICC) for the APFA total score was
excellent (0.920). When scores were dichotomised according to the published
threshold of 16, interrater agreement on the presence or absence of severe
social dysfunction was very good (
=0.79).
Statistical analyses
Univariate comparisons were performed with the 2, Fisher's
exact and Student's t tests. Interrater reliability was assessed with
Cohen's
coefficient for categorical measures, and with the intraclass
correlation coefficient for scale scores
(Bartko & Carpenter, 1976). The effect of comorbid conduct disorder on adult outcomes was assessed with
logistic regression models, controlling for age and gender. The effect of
comorbidity on APFA scores was analysed by a multivariate analysis of variance
(MANOVA), followed by separate two-way (childhood diagnosis x gender)
ANOVAs in order to limit the impact of missing data on statistical power. To
adjust for unequal observation times, Cox proportional hazards models were
fitted to criminal data, and relative risks of adult offences according to
childhood comorbidity status were estimated. Survival functions were
calculated with the Kaplan-Meier estimator, with age of onset at the first
conviction as the dependent event. Subjects free of any conviction during
their adult years were right-censored. Differences between survival functions
were examined with the log-rank test. Throughout, a conventional P
value of 0.05 was retained as the level of statistical significance.
RESULTS
Adult social adjustment
The main socio-demographic characteristics of the sample at follow-up
interview are summarised in Table
1. On most indicators of social adaptation and adjustment, the
CD-MDD group fared much worse than the MDD group, particularly regarding
employment and income. Social class differences were entirely accounted for by
the nearly two-fold increase in the proportion of participants not employed at
follow-up in the CD-MDD group.
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Completed suicide and lifetime suicide attempts
Of the 245 persons included in the study, 8 (5 men) had died by the time
they were traced at follow-up. Of these, 6 deaths (4 men, 2 women) were
probably suicide (mean age at death 24.4 years, range 16-35 years). Two
subjects were patients at a different psychiatric hospital at the time of
their death. Death certificates indicated the following causes of death:
overdose with tricyclic antidepressants (n=2), hanging
(n=1), multiple injuries, with one subject being struck by a train
(n=2), and injection of a mixture of heroin and diazepam
(n=1). Two death certificates clearly mentioned that the subject had
taken his own life; the verdicts returned by the coroners were suicide
(n=1), accidental death (n=2) and open verdict
(n=3). The cumulative risk of suicide in this sample was 2.45%
(6/245; 95% confidence interval 1.0-5.0%). Taking into account the length of
the observation period for each individual, the annual suicide incidence rate
in the whole sample was estimated at 120.2 per 100 000 (95% CI 48.7-250).
Suicidal deaths were more characteristic of the CD-MDD group (5 out of 6). The
annual incidence rate was much higher in the CD-MDD group (261.4 per 100 000)
compared with the MDD group (32.5 per 100 000), a difference which was
significant (incidence rate ratio 8.05, 95% CI 1.11-191.5, P=0.037).
As expected, suicidal deaths were also more frequent in males (annual
incidence rate 174.8 per 100 000, 95% CI 55.5-421.6) than in females (annual
incidence rate 74.0 per 100 000, 95% CI 12.4-244.5) with a rate ratio of 2.36
(95% CI 0.4-18.4, NS).
Table 2 presents rates of suicide attempt recorded during the depressive index episode in childhood and those reported at interview to have occurred during the follow-up period, together with a combined lifetime estimate. Over a third (34.9%) of the sample had made at least one attempt at the time of the index depressive episode, with a significantly higher rate in the CD-MDD group than in the MDD group. Suicide attempts through the follow-up period followed the same pattern, with 22.2% of subjects attempting suicide through follow-up and almost half the sample (44.3%) having made an attempt at least once in their life. The combined lifetime rates for suicide attempts testify to the long-term suicide risk carried over time by those with childhood and adolescent depression, and of the particular added vulnerability conveyed by comorbid conduct disorders. A robust gender effect was found for all three rates, with females being consistently at higher risk of suicide attempt (gender effect for lifetime history of suicide attempt: OR=3.7, 95% CI 1.7-8.0, P=0.001).
Adult social and personality dysfunction
One person in the CD-MDD group refused to complete this section of the
interview. Because of unequal ages, scores were missing for current
functioning for participants younger than 33 years at follow-up, for whom
there are only baseline scores. Accordingly, analyses relied on baseline
scores. Where scores for both periods were available, very high correlations
were found between the baseline score (age 21-30 years) and the current scores
within each of the six domains (work, 0.72; relationships, 0.68; friendships,
0.86; non-intimate contacts, 0.90; negotiations, 0.86; coping, 0.78),
suggesting highly stable patterns of functioning in the 20- to 40-year age
range. Thus, when baseline scores were missing (a relatively common occurrence
for the work domain) but scores were available for the current period of
functioning, we assigned the current value to replace the missing baseline
score. In a few cases one domain score was still missing, and the average
value of the other domain scores was input to that domain in order to
calculate the total APFA score in a comparable fashion for all subjects.
The MANOVA with the six APFA domain scores as dependent variables showed a
significant effect of childhood diagnosis (multivariate F statistic
2.77, d.f.=6,119, P=0.015). As subjects could not contribute to the
multivariate test owing to some missing data in one domain (in particular the
work domain), the effect of childhood diagnosis on both the total and the
domain scores of the APFA was further examined in a series of two-way
(childhood diagnosis x gender) ANOVAs
(Table 3). For all six domains
of social functioning, mean scores were significantly higher for the CD-MDD
group than for the MDD group, this difference being greatest for the
non-intimate social contacts domain. Half the mean scores of the CD-MDD group
were in the dysfunctional range (3), whereas this was not the case for any
domain for the MDD group. However, scores within the MDD group were the
highest for the two domains involving interpersonal relationships (love
relationships and friendships). The total score achieved a highly significant
differentiation between the two adult groups; however, the mean total score in
the MDD group was still elevated when compared with other adult control
samples (Hill et al,
1989), reflecting the clinical mode of case ascertainment. The
APFA scores were remarkably parallel to those obtained in an earlier Maudsley
investigation (Harrington et al,
1991). Using the published cut-off of 16, rates of pervasive
social dysfunction were computed for each group
(Table 3, last line). Again,
the comorbid group showed a two-fold increase in social dysfunction when
compared with the non-comorbid group (OR=3.15 adjusted on gender, 95% CI
1.5-6.4, P=0.002). Between-group differences are summarised in
Fig. 1, which shows, separately
for each diagnostic group, the proportion of subjects with no or up to six
domains of social dysfunction (defined as a domain score of 3 or more). Again,
groups differed significantly in the numbers of deviant domain scores
(2=19.7, d.f.=6, P=0.003), with a pattern of multiple
dysfunction being more characteristic of CD-MDD subjects. Over half (58.3%) of
the MDD sample had two or fewer domains with social dysfunction, in comparison
with only 28.8% of the CD-MDD group.
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With the exception of the work and love relationships domains, gender effects were significant in the ANOVAs for the remaining four domains and the total scores of the APFA; all differences reflected higher scores in men than in women.
Criminal records
Consistent with their high rates of anti-social personality disorders,
subjects in the CD-MDD group had significantly higher conviction rates in
adult life for all types of offences, compared with the MDD group (39.6%
v. 15.6%; 2=10.7, d.f.=1, P<0.001). The
proportional hazard models confirmed the raised risk of criminality in the
CD-MDD group (relative risk adjusted on gender 2.9, 95% CI 1.5-5.6); risk was
significantly higher for men than for women (relative risk 3.5, 95% CI
1.7-7.0). Similarly, a significant difference was found between the two
survival curves (log-rank test 12.05, d.f.=1, P=0.0005)
(Fig. 2). The proportions of
subjects who remained free of conviction through the follow-up interval were
81.7% in the MDD group and 60.1% in the CD-MDD group.
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DISCUSSION
Completed suicide and suicide attempts
A high annual incidence of suicidal death during the follow-up period was
found (120 per 100 000), representing roughly a six-fold increase of the
averaged population rate over the study period for men and women of the same
age group (Charlton et al,
1992). Our cumulative rate of suicide (2.45%) is comparable to
that (2.5%) derived from an earlier follow-up study conducted at the same site
(Harrington et al,
1990). Other studies conducted in the USA have yielded slightly
higher suicide risks for youths who had had depression, such as the 4.4% rate
in a 10-year follow-up of 159 children and adolescents with MDD
(Rao et al, 1993) or
the 7.7% rate in an extended 10- to 15-year follow-up of the same sample but
limited to adolescents (Weissman et
al, 1999). Differences between these two clinical samples are
difficult to interpret. Perhaps it should be borne in mind that youth and
young adult suicide rates have typically higher baseline values in the USA
than in the UK, and that the youths in the two UK studies were in their
teenage and young adult years two decades ago, at a time when the upward trend
in suicide rates had not yet occurred. In contrast, US studies were conducted
on younger subjects and some time after the secular increase in suicide rates
which occurred in the late 1950s in the USA. At any rate, all the studies
concur in indicating a strong increase in risk of suicidal death associated
with child and adolescent depression, a risk which extends much beyond the
teenage years.
As in most other studies of youths with depression assessed in clinical settings (Garber et al, 1988; Myers et al, 1991; Kovacs et al, 1993), rates of suicide attempts were very high during the index depressive episode. Suicide attempts were also a feature observed throughout adult life, with nearly half the sample having made a suicide attempt during their lifetime. At each measurement point, however, rates of suicidal behaviours (deaths and attempts) were much higher in the CD-MDD group, a result consistent with psychological autopsy studies which show risk associations with both depression and disruptive disorders (Shaffer et al, 1996), and with other follow-up studies of clinical samples of youths with depression (Kovacs et al, 1993). As no conduct-disorder group without depression was available in this study, the specific effect of comorbid depression on rates of suicidal behaviours in conduct-disorder groups cannot be directly estimated. These findings on increased rates of suicidal behaviours through follow-up in the subjects with comorbid depression are somewhat at variance with those of the previous Maudsley follow-up study (Harrington et al, 1994), although the power to detect such an association was greatly reduced in this earlier investigation.
Social adjustment
Compared with the MDD group, the overall outcome appeared worse in the
CD-MDD group for a range of social, personal and familial indicators. Thus,
the CD-MDD group reported higher levels of unemployment, lower income, less
frequent housing tenure and lower rates of cohabitation compared with the MDD
group. This long-term relationship between childhood diagnosis and adult
social adjustment is striking, bearing in mind the considerable length of the
follow-up interval. The lower social class status observed at follow-up in the
comorbid group must be calibrated against the lack of social class differences
at initial presentation between both groups
(Fombonne et al, 2001,
this issue). Thus, the social drift observed through the 20-year follow-up
interval is likely to be a direct consequence of childhood psychopathology
and, more specifically, of conduct disorder. A health economics analysis is
under way to explore these differences further.
Social dysfunction and criminality
On a standardised measure of social dysfunction, both groups had scores
indicative of substantial social dysfunction. For the MDD group, social
dysfunction tended to concentrate in a few domains, particularly those
involving interpersonal relationships, with the majority having fewer than
three dysfunctional domains. Similar specific areas of social dysfunction
among adults with recurrent depression have been reported by other
investigators (Garber et al,
1988; Harrington et
al, 1991; Rao et
al, 1995; Weissman et
al, 1999). In contrast, the CD-MDD group had both higher
levels and more pervasive types of social dysfunction than the MDD group, and
about two-thirds scored in the clinical range of the standardised measure.
This figure must be compared with the rate of 45% reported in this group for
adult anti-social personality disorder
(Fombonne et al, 2001,
this issue). Thus, it appears that adult dysfunction is underestimated when
outcome is narrowly defined with diagnostic categories and that dysfunctional
social outcomes are very common following conduct disorder. In addition, the
rates of both antisocial personality disorder and of more global dysfunction
are similar to those reported in follow-up studies of youths with conduct
disorder but without comorbid depression
(Zoccolillo et al,
1992). Thus, it appears that comorbid depression exerted no
attenuating influence on the outcome of conduct disorder in our sample; and
negative psychiatric outcomes, such as the high rate of depressive relapse and
the very high rates of suicidality in this group point towards the addition of
negative effects in adult life of both comorbid childhood conditions.
The design of this study is inadequate to test the potential impact of the therapeutic measures used at the time of Maudsley attendance on long-term outcomes of adolescent depression. What the data undoubtedly show, however, is the longterm elevation of risk for a range of detrimental adult psychopathological and social outcomes in this sample of youths with depression. Evidence-based intervention strategies have now become available, including both pharmacotherapy (Emslie et al, 1997) and time-limited psychotherapies (Harrington et al, 1998; Mufson et al, 1999), which appear to improve short-term outcomes in adolescent depression. The challenge now is to devise and test the efficacy of interventions to reduce the high relapse risk carried forward into adult life. Considering the multiplicity of negative outcomes, interventions likely to achieve that goal should incorporate components addressing not only depressive symptomatology per se but also comorbid disorders and broader issues of social functioning. Suicide prevention programmes should also aim at targeting youths with depression, particularly those with comorbid disruptive disorders, as they appear to have a heightened risk of suicide morbidity and mortality.
Clinical Implications and Limitations
CLINICAL IMPLICATIONS
LIMITATIONS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
The authors thank Olive McKeown, Theresa Pearce, Karen Schepman, Debbie Heavey, Val Hicks and Felicity Whitton for their contribution to the study.
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Received for publication March 13, 2000. Revision received October 19, 2000. Accepted for publication October 24, 2000.
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