The Brain–Heart Axis: An Umbrella Review on Impact of Psychiatric Disease on Incidence, Management, and Outlook of Cardiovascular Disease
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Materials and Methods
3. Results
First Author | Journal | Year | PubMed ID | Studies | Sample Size | Meta-Analysis | Patient Selection Criteria | Methodological Selection Criteria | Review Features |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Zhu C. [20] | Eur Heart J Open | 2023 | 36942107 | 34 | 16,712 | Yes | Patients with MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between marital/partner status and MI | Meta-analysis |
Aw P.Y. [22] | J Psychosom Res | 2023 | 36610338 | 48 | 57,342 | Yes | Patients with anxiety/depression and MI/stroke | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies evaluating the co-prevalence of anxiety/depression and MI/stroke | Meta-analysis |
Chan J.K.N. [24] | Schizophr Bull | 2022 | 35786737 | 22 | 12,235,501 | Yes | Patients with recent ACS | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between psychiatric disease and outcomes after ACS | Meta-analysis |
Jacquet-Smailovic M. [25] | Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2022 | 34715167 | 39 | 10,312 | Yes | Patients with MI screened for ASD, PTSD, and/or PTSS | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between anxiety and depression, personality traits, emotional and/or cognitive reactions, quality of life, social support, and potentially stressful events | Meta-analysis |
Khan Z. [26] | Cureus | 2021 | 35141096 | 7 | 4776 | Yes | Patients with recent ACS | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between depression and outcomes after ACS | Meta-analysis |
Tully P.J. [27] | Cochrane Database of Systematic Reviews | 2021 | 34910821 | 37 | 9225 | Yes | Individuals with CAD and depression | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between the effect of psychological and pharmacological interventions and depression in CAD patients | Meta-analysis |
Hannoodee H. [28] | Cureus | 2021 | 34540400 | 14 | 5,270,554 | No | ACS patients with or without a concurrent diagnosis of schizophrenia | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between schizophrenia and mortality or morbidity outcomes following an initial event of ACS | Systematic review |
Sancassiani F. [29] | Journal of Clinical Medicine | 2021 | 34501261 | 36 | 10,389 | No | People with AMI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effectiveness of psychological and educational interventions compared to usual care | Systematic review |
Cojocariu S.A. [30] | Journal of Personalized Medicine | 2021 | 34063747 | 11 | 3090 | No | Patients with acute coronary syndrome | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and ischemic heart disease | Systematic review |
Jacquet-Smailovic M. [31] | Journal of Traumatic Stress | 2021 | 33007150 | 39 | 10,312 | No | Patients with MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between the antidepressant therapy and mortality/cardiovascular outcomes in patients with ACS | Systematic review |
Fernandes N. [32] | Clinical Research in Cardiology | 2021 | 32617669 | 8 | 1171 | Yes | Patients with depression after ACS and CAD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between the effects of SSRIs and cardiovascular events in depressed CAD patients | Meta-analysis |
Sweda R. [33] | ESC Heart Failure | 2020 | 32935927 | 10 | 1935 | Yes | Patients with ACS and concomitant depression | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between the effect of antidepressant therapy and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with ACS | Meta-analysis |
Shao M. [35] | Progress in Neuropsychopharmacology & Biological Psychiatry | 2020 | 31954758 | 6 | 3,260,754 | Yes | AMI patients with and without schizophrenia | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the revascularization rate in schizophrenic patients after AMI | Meta-analysis |
Zheng X. [39] | Heart & Lung | 2019 | 30366575 | 20 | 1828 | yes | MI patients with anxiety and/or depression | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between exercise-based CR treatments and anxiety and depression symptoms in MI patients | Meta-analysis |
Ladwig S. [41] | Psychosomatic Medicine | 2018 | 30113911 | 49 | 19,705 | yes | Patients with a clinical diagnosis of stroke or MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between treatment rates and the application of guidelines in stroke and MI | Meta-analysis |
Richards S.H. [43] | European Journal of Preventive Cardiology | 2018 | 29212370 | 35 | 10,703 | Yes | Patients following MI or revascularization or with a diagnosis of angina pectoris or CHD defined by angiography | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between psychological intervention and mortality, cardiovascular morbidity, and psychological outcomes | Meta-analysis |
Richards S.H. [44] | Cochrane Library | 2017 | 28452408 | 35 | 10,703 | no | Coronary heart disease (CHD) patients | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between psychological interventions compared to usual care in adults with a specific diagnosis of CHD | Systematic review |
Yu Z.H. [45] | Br J Clin Pharmacol. | 2016 | 27198162 | 9 | 351,516 | yes | MI incidence among patients receiving antipsychotics vs. no treatment | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between AP and risk of MI | Meta-analysis |
Ski C.F. [46] | European Journal of Cardiovascular Nursing | 2016 | 26475227 | 5 | 3192 | no | People with coronary heart disease and depression | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between psychosocial interventions and depressive symptoms in patients with CHD and depression | Systematic review |
Doyle F. [48] | Psychosomatic Medicine | 2015 | 25886829 | 30 | 10,175 | no | Patients post-MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating sex differences in depression andprognosis post-MI | Meta-analysis |
Janzon E. [49] | Scandinavian Journal of Psychology | 2015 | 25756318 | 10 | 2478 | no | Patients who have suffered a cardiac event | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating whether physical activity can be a tool to reduce depression in patients who suffered a cardiac event | Systematic review |
Whalley B. [52] | International Journal of Behavioral Medicine | 2014 | 23179678 | 24 | 9296 | no | Patients with CHD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effects of psychological interventions in CHD patients | Meta-analysis |
Bradt J. [53] | Cochrane Database | 2013 | 24374731 | 26 | 1369 | no | People with CHD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effects of music interventions with standard care versus standard care alone on psychological and physiological responses in persons with CHD | Systematic review |
Foxwell R. [55] | J Psychosom Res | 2013 | 23972409 | 21 | 8452 | no | Patients with CHD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between physical activity and depression in patients who have suffered a cardiac event | Systematic review |
Thombs B.D. [56] | PLoS One | 2013 | 23308116 | 18 | 6857 | no | Patients with CHD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effectiveness of depression screening in CHD | Systematic review |
Whalley B. [59] | Cochrane Database Syst Rev | 2011 | 21833943 | 24 | 9296 | no | Patients with CHD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effects of psychological interventions in patients with CHD | Systematic review |
Zuidersma M. [60] | Psychotherapy and Psychosomatics | 2011 | 21502770 | 6 | 3206 | no | Patients with ACS and depression | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between onset and recurrence of depression in ACS patients and cardiovascular prognosis | Systematic review |
Thombs B.D. [61] | JAMA | 2008 | 19001627 | 11 | 4381 | no | Patients with CVD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the potential benefits of depression screening in patients with CVD | Systematic review |
Thombs B.D. [62] | Psychosomatics | 2007 | 17478586 | 7 | 3756 | no | Patients after acute MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the efficacy of depression screening in patients after AMI | Systematic review |
Van der Kooy K. [63] | Int J Geriatr Psychiatry | 2007 | 17236251 | 28 | 80,000 | yes | People with depression and risk for CVD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies reporting depression at baseline and CVD outcomes at follow-up | Meta-analysis and meta-regression |
Frasure-Smith N. [65] | Psychosom Med | 2005 | 15953794 | 32 | 87,033 | no | People with depression and risk for CVD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between depressive symptoms with cardiac disease outcomes | Systematic review |
Sørensenf C. [66] | Psychother Psychosom | 2005 | 15741756 | 31 | 33,913 | no | Patients with MI | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies assessing the methodological quality and investigating whether depression leads to an increased post-MI mortality | Systematic review |
Rees K. [67] | Cochrane Database Syst Rev | 2004 | 15106183 | 36 | 12,841 | no | Patients with CHD | RCTs investigating the effectiveness of psychological interventions in patients with CHD | Systematic review |
First Author | Journal | Year | PubMed ID | Studies | Sample Size | Meta-Analysis | Patient Selection Criteria | Methodological Selection Criteria | Review Features |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Köhler-Forsberg O. [19] | JAMA Psychiatry | 2023 | 37672261 | 52 | 24,006 | Yes | Patients with diagnosed medical disease and randomized to receive AD for depression | Systematic reviews of RCTs for treatment of comorbid depression in medical diseases | Umbrella review |
Chen Y. [21] | Am J Prev Med | 2023 | 36878413 | 10 | 343,371 | Yes | Adults with or without any type of child abuse before age 18 years | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between child abuse and CHD | Meta-analysis |
Zhang L. [23] | JAMA Netw Open | 2022 | 36416824 | 19 | 3,931,532 | Yes | Individuals receiving ADHD medications | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between ADHD medications and CVD | Meta-analysis |
Park K. [34] | Journal of Psychiatric Research | 2020 | 32135389 | 17 | 5452 | Yes | Patients taking duloxetine for mood disorders or for controlling pain | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between duloxetine and CAEs | Meta-analysis |
Haerizadeh M. [36] | Journal of Psychosomatic Research | 2020 | 31884302 | 6 | 280 | no | Patients with PTSD induced by medical events | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the optimal treatment of PTSD symptoms after medical events | Systematic review |
Papola D. [37] | Acta Psychiatrica Scandinavica | 2020 | 31260664 | 68 | 399,868 | no | Patients taking AP | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between hip fracture, thromboembolism, stroke, MI, pneumonia, sudden cardiac death, and exposure to antipsychotics | Umbrella review |
Zivkovic S. [38] | BMC Psychiatry | 2019 | 31221107 | 29 | 2,957,783 | yes | Patients taking AP | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between AP drug use and stroke or MI risk | Meta-analysis |
Benjenk I. [40] | Journal of Hospital Management and Health Policy | 2018 | 30283917 | 13 | 474,981 | no | Patients initially hospitalized for various medical diseases | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between interventions deigned to assess or treat mental health symptoms and risk of readmission following hospitalization for physical health conditions | Systematic review |
Eurelings L.S. [42] | Clinical Epidemiology | 2018 | 29670402 | 21 | 47,625 | yes | Older people with apathy symptoms and/or depressive symptoms | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between apathy and depressive symptoms in older people and future CVD, stroke, mortality | Meta-analysis |
Tully P.J. [47] | Psychological Medicine | 2015 | 26027689 | 12 | 1,131,612 | no | The population of interest was people with PD at baseline but without verified or known CHD at this time from the general, cardiology or psychiatric population (inpatients and outpatients) | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between PD, related syndromes, and incident CHD | Systematic review |
Jackson J.W. [50] | PLoS One | 2014 | 25140533 | 20 | 798,052 | yes | Older adults using FGAs or SGAs | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating mortality and medical event risk between FGAs and SGAs in older adults | Meta-analysis |
Prieto M.L. [51] | Acta Psychiatr Scand | 2014 | 24850482 | 5 | 13,115,911 | yes | Patients with BD | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the risk of MI and stroke in people with bipolar disorder | Meta-analysis |
Health Quality Ontario [54] | Ont Health Technol Assess Ser | 2013 | 24133570 | 9 | 8042 | no | Patients with chronic diseases | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the effectiveness of screening for depression and/or anxiety in adults with chronic diseases | Systematic review |
Westover A.N. [57] | BMC Cardiovasc Disord | 2012 | 22682429 | 10 | 4,017,420 | no | People using stimulants | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between prescription stimulant use and adverse cardiovascular outcomes | Systematic review |
Prochaska J.J. [58] | BMJ | 2012 | 22563098 | 22 | 9232 | no | Current tobacco users of adult age | Clinical (observational or RCTs) studies investigating the association between serious CAEs and varenicline use | Meta-analysis |
Swenson J.R. [64] | Can J Psychiatry | 2006 | 17249635 | 122 | 13,828 | no | High-risk patients | RCTs investigating whether SSRIs are associated with an increased or decreased risk of CAEs | Systematic review |
First Author | Year | Outcomes | Main Findings | Limitations |
---|---|---|---|---|
Köhler-Forsberg O. [19] | 2023 | Efficacy and safety of AD for treatment or prevention of comorbid depression in any medical disease, AD acceptability, and AD tolerability | ADs are effective and safe in treating and preventing depression in patients with comorbid medical disease | Few included RCTs |
Zhu C. [20] | 2023 | Association between marital/partner status and patient-reported outcome measures following MI | Functional outcomes after MI are better for married/partnered individuals | Definitions for outcomes and assessment of marital/partner status differed across studies |
Chen Y. [21] | 2023 | Association between child abuse with adult CHD risk | Child abuse is associated with an increased risk of adult CHD | Few prospective studies, prevalence of child abuse could have been underestimated |
Aw P.Y. [22] | 2023 | Incidence and prevalence of anxiety/depression and MI/stroke | There is substantial comorbidity pattern between anxiety/depression and MI/stroke | Short follow-up, substantial heterogeneity |
Zhang L. [23] | 2022 | Association between ADHD medications with the risk of a broad range of CVDs | There was no statistically significant association between ADHD medications and the risk of cardiovascular events among people of all ages | Heterogeneity due to a lack of data, investigation of the dose–response association was not possible |
Chan J.K.N. [24] | 2022 | People with SMI may experience excess mortality and inequitable treatment following ACS | SMI is associated with increased post-ACS mortality and undertreatment | High heterogeneity: pooled analyses for BD, specific categories of MACEs, and individual cardioprotective drug classes were conducted on a limited number of studies |
Jacquet-Smailovic M. [31] | 2022 | Anxiety and depression, personality traits, emotional and/or cognitive reactions, quality of life, social support, and potentially stressful events to which the individual may have been exposed | Survivors of major cardiac events, such as MI, are at a significant risk of developing PTSD or PTSS | Different score cutoffs used for probable disorder diagnoses among studies that used the same assessment instrument; the different time periods |
Khan Z. [26] | 2021 | The various risk factors and the role of cardiac rehabilitation in reducing the risk of depression in patients after AMI | Depression is common in patients post-ACS and remains undertreated, which can result in higher morbidity and mortality and lead to increased hospital readmission | Due to the lack of uniformity in the types of questionnaires used to collect data in previous studies; not enough data for patient demographics and depression |
Tully P.J. [47] | 2021 | The effects of psychological and pharmacological interventions for depression in CAD patients with comorbid depression | Psychological treatments compared to controls and AD compared to placebo, may result in a reduction in depression symptoms at the end of treatment | Single trials lack statistical power, and meta- analyses are limited by the heterogeneous methodological standards of primary studies |
Hannoodee H. [28] | 2021 | The impact of schizophrenia on mortality and morbidity outcomes following an initial event of ACS | Higher death rates following ACS in patients who were previously diagnosed with schizophrenia when compared to mentally healthy patients. Greater risk of major complications in schizophrenia patients suffering from ACS after hospital discharge compared to the general population | Retrospective studies, limited by missing data, poor coding, or poor follow-up of participants |
Sancassiani F. [29] | 2021 | Psychological factors associated with PHD or PDD in people with an ongoing AMI. | Wrong appraisal, interpretation and causal beliefs about symptoms, denial of the severity of the symptoms, and high levels of alexithymia were found related to longer PHD or PDD | Heterogeneity of methods and measures |
Cojocariu S.A. [30] | 2021 | The effectiveness of psychological and educational interventions (as an isolated measure or in a cardiac recovery program) compared to the usual care exclusively for patients with acute coronary syndromes | Patients with ACS can receive significant benefits through individualized psychoeducation sessions | A defective distribution between the two genders; the comparison with placebo not applied to psychological and educational interventions, and in all trials the control group was the usual care one; not investigated intervention for other emotional disorders such as BD |
Jacquet-Smailovic M. [25] | 2021 | The association between PTSD and IHD | The occurrence of an acute cardiac event is likely to contribute to the development of PTSD | The multiplicity and the heterogeneity of evaluation tools and samples examined. The different time periods studied |
Fernandes N. [32] | 2021 | The effects of SSRIs on cardiovascular events in depressed CAD patients | The use of SSRIs in post-ACS patients with depression was associated with a 44% relative risk reduction in MI. No difference in mortality | Risk of bias, short follow-up, clinical heterogeneity, absence of subgroup analysis |
Sweda R. [33] | 2020 | The effect of AD therapy on mortality and cardiovascular outcomes in patients with ACS | AD in patients following ACS have no effect on mortality but reduce repeat hospitalizations; in patients with depression, there is a reduced risk of recurrent MI with AD therapy | Heterogeneity; insufficient data to identify potentially relevant subgroups; the cumulative number of participants and events was low; patients recruited in RCTs are well selected and might not represent the general population |
Park K. [34] | 2020 | The association between duloxetine and CAEs | Duloxetine increased heart rate by 2.22 beats/min and diastolic blood pressure by 0.82 mmHg | Most RCTs were conducted for <13 weeks and each study group’s sample size was <350 |
Shao M. [35] | 2020 | The revascularization rate in schizophrenic patients after AMI | Patients with schizophrenia and AMI have a lower rate of coronary revascularization as compared with patients without schizophrenia | Limited number of the included studies and their heterogeneity; all retrospective studies |
Haerizadeh M. [36] | 2020 | The optimal treatment of PTSD symptoms after medical events such as MI and cancer diagnosis | CBT and EMDR may be promising approaches to reducing PTSD symptoms due to medical event | Few RCTs on this topic; small sample sizes; PTSD symptoms frequently assessed by self-report questionnaires; unblinded patients, substantial heterogeneity |
Papola D. [37] | 2020 | The risk of hip fracture, thromboembolism, stroke, MI, pneumonia, and sudden cardiac death associated with exposure to AP | The risk of pneumonia, followed by the risk of hip fracture and thromboembolism, are associated with exposure to AP | The observational nature of the primary studies; significant heterogeneity in terms of populations included in the primary studies; no reanalyzed data by AP class or by individual drug |
Zivkovic S. [38] | 2019 | Associations between AP drug use and stroke or MI risk | AP drug use may be associated with an increased risk of stroke, but there is no clear evidence that this risk is further elevated in patients with dementia | Shortcomings of individual studies; confounders rarely adequately adjusted for; the definition of stroke varied considerably across studies; heterogeneity in the definition of AP drug use and duration of follow-up varied widely, from just weeks to 13 years |
Zheng X. [39] | 2019 | The efficacy of exercise-based CR treatments in terms of relief from symptoms of anxiety and depression symptoms among patients with MI | For patients with MI, exercise-based CR has been demonstrated to alleviate anxiety and depressive symptoms | A poor level of reporting within the available studies; their study incorporated nine non-RCTs; heterogeneity in the subgroup analysis of anxiety |
Benjenk I. [40] | 2018 | Interventions specifically designed to assess or treat mental health symptoms can effectively reduce risk of readmission following hospitalization for physical health conditions | The use of mental health interventions after discharge may be a mechanism for reducing physical health condition readmissions | Suboptimal study designs and small sample sizes; great variation in the readmission outcome measures used by the different studies |
Ladwig S. [41] | 2018 | Treatment rates and the application of guidelines in stroke and MI | Despite the high frequency of depression after stroke and MI and the existence of efficacious treatment strategies, people often remain untreated | Variability of the assessment tools used; the reported use of AD may not indicate adequate treatment of depression |
Eurelings L.S. [42] | 2018 | Apathy and depressive symptoms in older people are associated with future CVD, stroke, and mortality | Apathy symptoms, irrespective of concurrent depressive symptoms, were associated with a higher risk of MI, stroke, and all-cause CV and non-CV mortality. Depressive symptoms were related to a similarly increased risk of stroke and mortality outcomes, but not of MI | Apathy and depression subscales not validated against a clinical diagnosis; not adjusted all potential confounders; no longitudinal data regarding the development of apathy and depressive symptoms over time |
Richards S.H. [43] | 2018 | Mortality, cardiovascular morbidity, and psychological outcomes | Psychological intervention improved psychological symptoms and reduced cardiac mortality for people with CHD | Low ability to judge risk of bias; majority of participants were men post-MI, so poorly generalizable; clinical heterogeneity |
Richards S.H. [44] | 2017 | To compare psychological interventions to usual care for coronary heart disease patients, focusing on outcomes like mortality, cardiac morbidity, and psychological well-being, identifying predictors of the effectiveness | Psychological treatments for CHD patients reduced cardiac mortality and relieved psychological symptoms, but no effect on total mortality or risk of revascularization or non-fatal MI | Poor methods, small trials, and short follow up, lack of reporting of study interventions |
Yu Z.H. [45] | 2016 | Assess the risk of MI among users of AP | AP use is significantly associated with MI risk, especially among patients with schizophrenia or with drug use during the first 30 days | Potential publication bias, a language bias, inflated estimates by a flawed methodologic design in smaller studies and/or a lack of publication of small trials with opposite results |
Ski C.F. [46] | 2016 | Depressive symptoms, mortality (all-cause and cardiac), MI, revascularization, anxiety, social support, and quality of life | Psychosocial interventions, compared with usual care, appear to be effective in reducing depressive symptoms in patients with CHD and depression | Small number of studies included heterogeneity in outcomes and in differences in treatment |
Tully P.J. [27] | 2015 | The association between PD, related syndromes, and incident CHD | PD was independently associated with incident CHD, MI, and MACE | Unclear or unblinded determination of CHD outcome, the absence of clear inclusion criteria, retrospective design |
Doyle F. [48] | 2015 | Whether post-MI indices could account for found differences in depression | Prevalence of depression post-MI was higher in women, but the association between depression and cardiac prognosis was worse for men | Various heterogeneities; endpoint assessments may pose challenges, but the random intercept addresses study variations |
Janzon E. [49] | 2015 | To investigate if physical activity can reduce depression in people with cardiovascular events | Exercise could be effective to reduce the level of depression among CHD patients | Few relevant systematic reviews; old studies from diverse countries and limited evidence |
Jackson J.W. [50] | 2014 | Comparing mortality and medical event risk between FGAs and SGAs in older adults; quantify how much medical events explain the observed mortality difference between FGAs and SGAs | Elderly people using FGAs were at higher risk for stroke, ventricular arrhythmia, MI, and hip fracture as compared to SGAs | Individual studies suffered from residual or unmeasured confounding by risk factors for mortality or for the medical event studied |
Prieto M.L. [51] | 2014 | Review all available evidence; analyze if people with BD are at higher risk of heart attack or stroke; suggest future research on epidemiology and biomarkers | People with BD have higher risk of stroke and elevated mortality rate, not completely explained by an increased risk of MI | Small number of studies, significant heterogeneity, and dissimilar methodological features |
Whalley B. [52] | 2014 | To estimate effects of psychological interventions on cardiac diseases mortality | Psychological interventions did not show strong evidence on reducing total deaths, risk of revascularization, or non-fatal infarction. They did slightly improve depression and anxiety, with a small effect on cardiac mortality | Poor quality of reporting data; substantial heterogeneity; risk of bias |
Bradt J. [53] | 2013 | Psychological distress, anxiety, state anxiety, heart and respiratory rate, systolic blood pressure, and pain | Listening to music may have a positive effect on CHD people by reducing blood pressure, heart rate, anxiety, and potentially pain and respiratory rate | Poor quality of reporting, mostly small trials, and high risk of bias |
Health Quality Ontario [54] | 2013 | Review effectiveness of depression and/or anxiety screening in adults with chronic diseases | No evidence that screening and treating depression in adults with chronic diseases improved chronic disease outcomes | Heterogeneity in duration of treatments, follow-ups, and different forms of depression |
Foxwell R. [55] | 2013 | To examine the connection between illness perceptions, QoL, and mood in a heterogeneous sample of CHD patients | Illness perceptions affect outcomes and disease progression in CHD populations, but no specific model is supported by the results | The combined quality control checklist lacks psychometric testing. Most studies did not state subject representativeness, limiting generalization of findings |
Thombs B.D. [56] | 2013 | To review depression screening in CHD patients, focusing on screening tool accuracy, treatment effectiveness, and screening’s impact on depression outcomes | Treating depression shows slight symptom improvement in post-MI and stable CHD patients, but not in heart failure patients. Routine depression screening has not proven to improve depression or cardiac outcomes | Substantial heterogeneity; no eligible studies |
Westover A.N. [57] | 2012 | Association between prescription stimulant use and adverse cardiovascular outcomes | Most studies in children found no association between stimulant use and adverse cardiovascular outcomes, while that association was more present in adults | Substantial heterogeneity; risk of bias |
Prochaska J.J. [58] | 2012 | To examine the risk of treatment emergent, cardiovascular serious adverse events associated with varenicline use for tobacco cessation | No significant increase in cardiovascular serious adverse events associated with varenicline use | Bias in methods |
Whalley B. [59] | 2011 | Determine the independent effects of psychological interventions in patients with CHD and explore study-level predictors of the impact of these interventions | Psychological treatments appear effective in treating psychological symptoms of CHD patients | The lack of methodological detail; substantial heterogeneity for psychological outcomes; risk of bias |
Zuidersma M. [60] | 2011 | Evaluate if depressed ACS patients face different risks based on recurrence and timing of depressive episodes | There is no consistent evidence to prove that ACS patients with first and new onset depression are at particularly risk of worse prognosis | Few included studies; substantial heterogeneity |
Thombs B.D. [61] | 2008 | Evaluation of the potential benefits of depression screening in patients with CVD | Depression treatment in people with CVDs improves depression symptoms but does not affect cardiac outcomes | Heterogeneity in outcomes and in differences in treatment. Not enough evidence to assess potential harms related to screening or treatment |
Thombs B.D. [62] | 2007 | To assess performance characteristics of depression screening instruments after acute MI | Depression treatment in people with CVDs improves depression symptoms but does not affect cardiac outcomes | Small samples, low quality, and limited information. Inconsistencies in results related to diagnostic usefulness |
Van der Kooy K. [63] | 2007 | To estimate the risk of depression as an independent risk factor for various CVD and explore the effects of heterogeneity and methodological quality | Depression seems to be an independent risk factor for the onset of a wide range of CVDs, although this evidence is related to a high level of heterogeneity | Missing some studies, for instance because of non-journal publication; substantial heterogeneity |
Swenson J.R. [64] | 2006 | To examine whether SSRIs were associated with an increased or decreased risk of CAEs | Review on AD in high-risk patients did not determine if SSRIs increase or decrease cardiovascular risks | Rarity of serious AEs, lack of large trials and lack of adequate reporting of AEs in published trials |
Frasure-Smith N. [65] | 2005 | To officially recognize depression as a cardiac risk factor | Data recognizes depression as a risk factor for both the development and worsening of CHD | Multiple methodological differences in RCTs |
Sørensenf C. [66] | 2005 | To assess, in patients with MI, the methodological quality and to test whether depression leads to an increased post-MI mortality | No conclusion | Low number of studies of acceptable methodological quality; mixed results; risk of bias |
Rees K. [67] | 2004 | To determine the effectiveness of psychological interventions on mortality and morbidity, psychological measures, QoL, and modifiable cardiac risk factors in patients with CHD | Overall psychological interventions showed no effect on total or cardiac mortality but did show small reductions in anxiety and depression in patients with CHD | Poor quality of trials, considerable heterogeneity, and risk of publication bias |
4. Discussion
Supplementary Materials
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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Mazza, M.; Biondi-Zoccai, G.; Lisci, F.M.; Brisi, C.; Sfratta, G.; Rossi, S.; Traversi, G.; Gaetani, E.; Pola, R.; Morini, S.; et al. The Brain–Heart Axis: An Umbrella Review on Impact of Psychiatric Disease on Incidence, Management, and Outlook of Cardiovascular Disease. Life 2024, 14, 919. https://doi.org/10.3390/life14080919
Mazza M, Biondi-Zoccai G, Lisci FM, Brisi C, Sfratta G, Rossi S, Traversi G, Gaetani E, Pola R, Morini S, et al. The Brain–Heart Axis: An Umbrella Review on Impact of Psychiatric Disease on Incidence, Management, and Outlook of Cardiovascular Disease. Life. 2024; 14(8):919. https://doi.org/10.3390/life14080919
Chicago/Turabian StyleMazza, Marianna, Giuseppe Biondi-Zoccai, Francesco Maria Lisci, Caterina Brisi, Greta Sfratta, Sara Rossi, Gianandrea Traversi, Eleonora Gaetani, Roberto Pola, Sofia Morini, and et al. 2024. "The Brain–Heart Axis: An Umbrella Review on Impact of Psychiatric Disease on Incidence, Management, and Outlook of Cardiovascular Disease" Life 14, no. 8: 919. https://doi.org/10.3390/life14080919