Intermediary roles of prospective memory and retrospective memory in the comorbidity of depression and pain

Author:

Gao Hua,Xia Qingrong,Zhang Xulai,Chen Yuanyuan,Yan Junwei,Gao Jianliang,Zhang Loufeng,Zhang Jie,Wang Keming,Li Chao,Ju Peijun,Zhu CuizhenORCID

Abstract

BackgroundPatients who suffer comorbidity of major depressive disorder (MDD) and chronic pain (CP) maintain a complex interplay between maladaptive prospective memory (PM) and retrospective memory (RM) with physical pain, and their complications are still unknown.AimsWe aimed to focus on the full cognitive performance and memory complaints in patients with MDD and CP, patients with depression without CP, and control subjects, considering the possible influence of depressed affect and chronic pain severity.MethodsAccording to the fifth edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders and the criteria given by the International Association of Pain, a total of 124 participants were included in this cross-sectional cohort study. Among them, 82 depressed inpatients and outpatients from Anhui Mental Health centre were divided into two groups: a comorbidity group(patients with MDD and CP) (n=40) and a depression group (patients with depression without CP) (n=42). Meanwhile, 42 healthy controls were screened from the hospital’s physical examination centre from January 2019 to January 2022. The Hamilton Depression Rating Scale-24 (HAMD-24) and Beck Depression Inventory-II (BDI-II) were used to evaluate the severity of depression. The Pain Intensity Numerical Rating Scale (PI-NRS), Short-Form McGill Pain Questionnaire-2 Chinese version (SF-MPQ-2-CN), Montreal Cognitive Assessment-Basic Section (MoCA-BC), and Prospective and Retrospective Memory Questionnaire (PRMQ) were used to assess pain-related features and the global cognitive functioning of study participants.ResultsThe impairments in PM and RM differed remarkably among the three groups (F=7.221, p<0.001; F=7.408, p<0.001) and were severe in the comorbidity group. Spearman correlation analysis revealed the PM and RM were positively correlated with continuous pain and neuropathic pain (r=0.431, p<0.001; r=0.253, p=0.022 and r=0.415, p<0.001; r=0.247, p=0.025), respectively. Regression analysis indicated a significant positive relationship between affective descriptors and total BDI-II score (β=0.594, t=6.600, p<0.001). Examining the mediator pathways revealed the indirect role of PM and RM in patients with comorbid MDD and CP.ConclusionsPatients with comorbid MDD and CP presented more PM and RM impairments than patients with MDD without CP. PM and RM are possibly mediating factors that affect the aetiology of comorbid MDD and CP.Trial registration numberchiCTR2000029917.

Funder

Shanghai Key Laboratory of Psychotic Disorders Open Grant

Projects supported by public welfare scientific research institutes

Applied medicine research project of Hefei Health Committee

Applied medicine research project of Anhui Health Committee

Hefei Fourth People’s Hospital

Key research and development projects of Anhui Province

Publisher

BMJ

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health,Neurology (clinical),Neurology

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