Depression prevalence based on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale compared to Structured Clinical Interview for DSM DIsorders classification: Systematic review and individual participant data meta-analysis

  • Anita Lyubenova
  • Dipika Neupane
  • Brooke Levis
  • Yin Wu
  • Ying Sun
  • Chen He
  • Ankur Krishnan
  • Parash M Bhandari
  • Zelalem Negeri
  • Mahrukh Imran
  • Danielle B Rice
  • Marleine Azar
  • Matthew J Chiovitti
  • Nazanin Saadat
  • Kira E Riehm
  • Jill T Boruff
  • John P A Ioannidis
  • Pim Cuijpers
  • Simon Gilbody
  • Lorie A Kloda
  • Scott B Patten
  • Ian Shrier
  • Roy C Ziegelstein
  • Liane Comeau
  • Nicholas D Mitchell
  • Marcello Tonelli
  • Simone N Vigod
  • Franca Aceti
  • Jacqueline Barnes
  • Amar D Bavle
  • Cheryl T Beck
  • Carola Bindt
  • Philip M Boyce
  • Adomas Bunevicius
  • Linda H Chaudron
  • Nicolas Favez
  • Barbara Figueiredo
  • Lluïsa Garcia-Esteve
  • Lisa Giardinelli
  • Nadine Helle
  • Louise M Howard
  • Jane Kohlhoff
  • Laima Kusminskas
  • Zoltán Kozinszky
  • Lorenzo Lelli
  • Angeliki A Leonardou
  • Valentina Meuti
  • Sandra N Radoš
  • Purificación N García
  • Susan J Pawlby
  • Chantal Quispel
  • Emma Robertson-Blackmore
  • Tamsen J Rochat
  • Deborah J Sharp
  • Bonnie W M Siu
  • Alan Stein
  • Robert C Stewart
  • Meri Tadinac
  • S Darius Tandon
  • Iva Tendais
  • Annamária Töreki
  • Anna Torres-Giménez
  • Thach D Tran
  • Kylee Trevillion
  • Katherine Turner
  • Johann M Vega-Dienstmaier
  • Andrea Benedetti
  • Brett D Thombs

Abstract

OBJECTIVES: Estimates of depression prevalence in pregnancy and postpartum are based on the Edinburgh Postnatal Depression Scale (EPDS) more than on any other method. We aimed to determine if any EPDS cutoff can accurately and consistently estimate depression prevalence in individual studies.

METHODS: We analyzed datasets that compared EPDS scores to Structured Clinical Interview for DSM (SCID) major depression status. Random-effects meta-analysis was used to compare prevalence with EPDS cutoffs versus the SCID.

RESULTS: Seven thousand three hundred and fifteen participants (1017 SCID major depression) from 29 primary studies were included. For EPDS cutoffs used to estimate prevalence in recent studies (≥9 to ≥14), pooled prevalence estimates ranged from 27.8% (95% CI: 22.0%-34.5%) for EPDS ≥ 9 to 9.0% (95% CI: 6.8%-11.9%) for EPDS ≥ 14; pooled SCID major depression prevalence was 9.0% (95% CI: 6.5%-12.3%). EPDS ≥14 provided pooled prevalence closest to SCID-based prevalence but differed from SCID prevalence in individual studies by a mean absolute difference of 5.1% (95% prediction interval: -13.7%, 12.3%).

CONCLUSION: EPDS ≥14 approximated SCID-based prevalence overall, but considerable heterogeneity in individual studies is a barrier to using it for prevalence estimation.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
Aufsatznummer1860
ISSN1049-8931
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 03.2021

Anmerkungen des Dekanats

© 2020 The Authors. International Journal of Methods in Psychiatric Research published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

PubMed 33089942