The contribution of stress to the comorbidity of migraine and major depression: results from a prospective cohort study
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Abstract
Objectives: To assess how much the association
between migraine and depression may be explained by
various measures of stress.
Design: National Population Health Survey is a
prospective cohort study representative of the Canadian
population. Eight years of follow-up time were used in
the present analyses.
Setting: Canadian adult population ages 18–64.
Participants: 9288 participants.
Outcome: Incident migraine and major depression.
Results: Adjusting for sex and age, depression was
predictive of incident migraine (HR: 1.62; 95% CI 1.03
to 2.53) and migraine was predictive of incident
depression (HR: 1.55; 95% CI 1.15 to 2.08). However,
adjusting for each assessed stressor (childhood
trauma, recent marital problems, recent
unemployment, recent household financial problems,
work stress, chronic stress and change in social
support) decreased this association, with chronic
stress being a particularly strong predictor of
outcomes. When adjusting for all stressors
simultaneously, both associations were largely
attenuated (depression–migraine HR: 1.30; 95% CI
0.80 to 2.10; migraine–depression HR: 1.19; 95% CI
0.86 to 1.66).
Conclusions: Much of the apparent association
between migraine and depression may be explained by
stress.
