ABSTRACT
Objective
This study aimed to describe depression treatment patterns, identify unique trajectory groups using a group-based trajectory approach, and explore associated social determinants in older adults undergoing first-time depression treatment during a 3-year follow-up.
Methods
This Danish register-based cohort study included all adults aged ≥ 65 who initiated depression treatment by redeeming first-time antidepressant prescriptions (no prescriptions in the last 10 years) between 2006 and 2015. The outcome of interest during the 2-year follow-up was depression treatment, assessed as antidepressant prescriptions redemptions and psychiatric hospital contacts for depression. Latent class growth analyses were applied to model treatment trajectories during 3 years. Multinomial logistic regression analyses were used to analyze adjusted associations between social determinates and trajectory group membership.
Results
Among the 66,540 older adults (55.2% females, mean age: 77.3 years), we identified three distinct groups with unique patterns of depression treatment trajectories: ‘brief-treatment’ where individuals stopped depression treatment within 6 months (33.7%); ‘gradual-withdrawal’ (26.5%) where treatment was gradually stopped over 2 years; and ‘persistent-treatment’ where individuals continued depression treatment for the entire 3 years (39.8%). Females, single-person households, and residents of less-urbanized regions were associated with higher odds of membership in the ‘persistent-treatment’ group, while older age, widowhood or separation, and non-Danish ethnicities were associated with lower odds.
Conclusions
Three distinct patterns of depression treatment trajectories were identified in older adults, indicating differential clinical courses of depression—potentially influenced by social determinants, including sex, marital status, urban residence, and ethnicity. Early patient stratification and targeted interventions are crucial in depression care for older adults.