Mental Illness in Relation to Cardiovascular Disease Mortality and Out-of-Hospital Cardiac Arrest Characteristics and Survival
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Date
2024
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University of Edinburgh
Abstract
Abstract
Background
People with mental illnesses have a 10–20 years shorter life expectancy than the
general population. This mortality gap is primarily attributed to the increased risk and
worse outcome of cardiovascular disease (CVD) among individuals with mental
illnesses. Socioeconomic factors and healthcare accessibility, combined with systemic
deficiencies in healthcare infrastructure and new policies aimed at reducing healthcare
utilisation, may have exacerbated these disparities. Despite efforts to prioritise
equitable care delivery, stigma and a lack of training among healthcare providers
about mental health conditions persist, contributing to the ongoing challenges of
addressing this issue. Although the link between mental illnesses and CVD is well
established, the relationship between mental illnesses and out-of-hospital cardiac
arrest (OHCA) characteristics and outcomes has been comparatively underresearched.
The majority of OHCAs have an underlying cardiac aetiology, and hence,
risk factors for CVD, such as depression, can influence the probability of experiencing
OHCA and surviving it. A better understanding of how mental illnesses affect OHCA
outcomes may help explain part of the overall observed lower life expectancy in
patients with mental illnesses. Therefore, this thesis aims to explore the mortality gap
between individuals with and without mental illnesses, with a specific focus on OHCA
as a potential contributor to this gap.
Methods
In this thesis, I conducted a systematic literature review and three data analysis
projects using different datasets and methods. In the first research project, I used data
from the Scottish Mental Health Inpatient and Day Case Scottish Morbidity Record
dataset to identify individuals who were 18 years of age or older and admitted with
depression, as coded by the International Classification of Diseases (ICD)-10 F32–
F33, between 2000 and 2019. I subsequently linked this dataset with death records to
ascertain the causes of death. To estimate standardised mortality ratios (SMRs), I
calculated the person-time at risk for people with severe depression by sex, 5-year
age group, and calendar-year group. I estimated SMRs among individuals with severe
depression using the whole Scottish population as the standard.
To identify gaps in the current research on the relationship between mental illnesses
and OHCA, I conducted a systematic review search of studies that looked into this
topic, starting from the inception of relevant databases and ending on December 11,
2021, with an update on February 9, 2024. The search objective was to identify
observational studies reporting on OHCA incidence, characteristics, or outcomes
among individuals with mental illnesses. I and a second reviewer (another PhD
student) independently screened titles and abstracts for eligibility. Both reviewers then
independently assessed the full texts of potentially eligible articles against the eligibility
criteria and independently conducted the data extraction.
Following these initial investigations, I conducted two retrospective cohort studies
using OHCA event data to further explore the survival and characteristics of OHCA in
individuals with depression in one study and with unscheduled hospital admissions
where a mental illness was recorded in the other study. In the first study, I used data
from the ARREST (Amsterdam Resuscitation Studies) registry, spanning the period
from 2008 to 2018. I extracted relevant comorbidity information, including depression,
from patients' general practitioner records. OHCA survival was defined as survival 30
days after the OHCA or hospital discharge. To estimate the association between
history of depression and OHCA survival, I used logistic regression modelling.
Additionally, I explored the mediating effects of initial heart rhythm and bystander
cardiopulmonary resuscitation (bCPR) provision. In the second study, I linked the
Scottish Ambulance Services (SAS) OHCA dataset with the Unscheduled Care Data
Mart (UCD). The UCD includes patient demographics, mortality data, emergency and
urgent care service use across Scotland, and unscheduled hospital admission records
to acute and psychiatric hospitals from January 1, 2011 onward. The analysis
excluded individuals below 18 years of age, those with traumatic OHCA incidents, and
those without community health index numbers. I classified exposed patients based
on whether they had a documented history of an unscheduled hospital admission
where a mental health illness was recorded (ICD-10 codes F00–F99) or had previously
experienced unscheduled psychiatric hospital admissions before the OHCA event. I
assessed the association between unscheduled hospital admission record of mental
illness and 30-day survival following OHCA using both unadjusted and adjusted
logistic regression models. I performed subgroup analyses to examine this association
across some demographic and clinical strata, including age groups, sex,
socioeconomic status, year of arrest, and prevalent types of mental illnesses in the
study population.
Results
In the initial study, I found that among 28,808 individuals with severe depression,
27.4% died over a median follow-up of 8.7 years, with all-cause relative mortality being
over three times higher than expected. Circulatory diseases were the leading causes
of death, with excess mortality particularly pronounced for cerebrovascular disease.
Both males and females with severe depression experienced higher all -cause and
cause-specific mortality compared to the general population, with deaths from suicide
having the highest SMR.
For the literature review, the full search yielded 11,380 studies, with 10 meeting
inclusion criteria (eight retrospective cohort studies and two nested case-control
studies). Three of the included studies focused on depression, while seven
encompassed various psychiatric conditions. People with mental illnesses were more
likely to have arrests in private residences, unwitnessed arrests, more comorbidities,
less bCPR, and non-shockable initial heart rhythms. The few studies that were
identified also reported a higher OHCA incidence risk and lower survival rates in
people with mental illnesses compared to people without mental illnesses.
The analysis of the ARREST dataset included 5,594 OHCA cases, of which 582
individuals had pre-existing depression. These patients exhibited less favourable
patient and resuscitation characteristics and lower odds of survival, even after
adjusting for age, sex, and comorbidities. Initial heart rhythm and bCPR partially
mediated the observed association, but they did not fully account for it.
The final study, which used national Scottish data, initially identified 36,775 OHCA
patients that were attended by SAS. After excluding those who were not eligible, the
study included 30,523 patients with OHCA. Among the included cases, 12.8% had a
history of an unscheduled hospital admission where a mental health illness was
recorded. Those with a record of a mental illness had substantially lower 30-day
survival odds compared to those without. This association persisted across various
demographic and clinical subgroups.
Conclusion
This thesis addresses shortcomings in our understanding of the mortality gap between
individuals with and without mental illnesses, particularly focussing on OHCA as a
contributing factor. The findings show that patients with depression have higher
mortality rates, mainly due to circulatory diseases. A systematic review highlighted the
scarcity of research on OHCA among people with mental illnesses. Subsequent
studies showed that patients with depression in the Netherlands and those with an
unscheduled hospital admission record of mental illness in Scotland had lower OHCA
survival rates, regardless of event characteristics or comorbidities. This thesis also
discusses common barriers to pre-hospital and mental health research, emphasising
the necessity for improved data linkage and comprehensive national datasets. The
association between mental illness and lower OHCA survival persisted after adjusting
for key OHCA characteristics that could potentially explain the link, suggesting that
this association may be independent of these factors. Future research should further
investigate the underlying mechanisms to help reduce premature mortality in people
with mental illness, including factors not discussed in this thesis, such as the potential
impact of psychotropic medications on OHCA incidence and outcomes.
Description
Keywords
epidemiology, public health, OHCA, cardiac arrest, pre hospital, emergency medical services, mental health