Introduction: Post-stroke depressive symptoms are heterogeneous and variably associated with other psycho-cognitive features. We employed cluster analysis to identify distinct profiles of post-stroke depressive symptomatology and their association with cognitive performance. Methods: We included consecutive patients undergoing neuropsychiatric evaluation 6 months after stroke. Cluster analysis incorporated the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, along with the apathy and anxiety items from the Neuropsychiatric Inventory questionnaire. Baseline clinical/neuroimaging variables and 6-months cognitive outcomes were compared across profiles. Results: We included 189 patients with acute cerebrovascular events (median age 75.4 years, 62% male, 80% ischemic strokes). Three profiles emerged: (A) low-depressive symptoms (n = 108), (B) moderate-depressive symptoms plus anxiety (n = 41), (C) high-depressive symptoms plus apathy (n = 40). Regarding baseline predictors of 6-month depressive symptoms profiles, patients with high-depressive symptoms plus apathy exhibited lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores at baseline (16.0 vs. 21.5; adjusted odds ratio [adj.OR] per 1-point increase 0.91, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.83–0.99) compared to patients with low-depressive symptoms; moderate-depressive symptoms plus anxiety patients had less cortical atrophy compared to both low-depressive symptoms (adj.OR 0.92, 95% CI 0.86–0.99) and high-depressive symptoms plus apathy (adj.OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.81–0.97) profiles. Regarding 6-month cognitive performance, high-depressive symptoms plus apathy patients showed higher rates of post-stroke dementia and attention/executive function impairment compared with the two other groups (both p < 0.05), and higher rates of language impairment compared with low-depressive symptoms profile (p < 0.05). Conclusion: By integrating apathy and anxiety in our model, depressive symptoms after stroke emerged as heterogeneous neuropsychiatric syndromes, showing different baseline predictors and distinctive cognitive patterns.

Depressive Symptoms Profiles and Cognitive Outcomes After Stroke / G. Scopelliti, F. Mele, I. Cova, F. Masserini, V. Cucumo, G. Maestri, A. Nicotra, A. Forgione, P. Bertora, S. Pomati, E. Salvadori, L. Pantoni. - In: BRAIN AND BEHAVIOR. - ISSN 2162-3279. - 15:9(2025 Sep), pp. e70801.1-e70801.9. [10.1002/brb3.70801]

Depressive Symptoms Profiles and Cognitive Outcomes After Stroke

G. Scopelliti
Primo
;
F. Mele;I. Cova;F. Masserini;V. Cucumo;P. Bertora;S. Pomati;E. Salvadori;L. Pantoni
Ultimo
2025

Abstract

Introduction: Post-stroke depressive symptoms are heterogeneous and variably associated with other psycho-cognitive features. We employed cluster analysis to identify distinct profiles of post-stroke depressive symptomatology and their association with cognitive performance. Methods: We included consecutive patients undergoing neuropsychiatric evaluation 6 months after stroke. Cluster analysis incorporated the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale, along with the apathy and anxiety items from the Neuropsychiatric Inventory questionnaire. Baseline clinical/neuroimaging variables and 6-months cognitive outcomes were compared across profiles. Results: We included 189 patients with acute cerebrovascular events (median age 75.4 years, 62% male, 80% ischemic strokes). Three profiles emerged: (A) low-depressive symptoms (n = 108), (B) moderate-depressive symptoms plus anxiety (n = 41), (C) high-depressive symptoms plus apathy (n = 40). Regarding baseline predictors of 6-month depressive symptoms profiles, patients with high-depressive symptoms plus apathy exhibited lower Montreal Cognitive Assessment scores at baseline (16.0 vs. 21.5; adjusted odds ratio [adj.OR] per 1-point increase 0.91, 95% confidence interval [95% CI] 0.83–0.99) compared to patients with low-depressive symptoms; moderate-depressive symptoms plus anxiety patients had less cortical atrophy compared to both low-depressive symptoms (adj.OR 0.92, 95% CI 0.86–0.99) and high-depressive symptoms plus apathy (adj.OR 0.89, 95% CI 0.81–0.97) profiles. Regarding 6-month cognitive performance, high-depressive symptoms plus apathy patients showed higher rates of post-stroke dementia and attention/executive function impairment compared with the two other groups (both p < 0.05), and higher rates of language impairment compared with low-depressive symptoms profile (p < 0.05). Conclusion: By integrating apathy and anxiety in our model, depressive symptoms after stroke emerged as heterogeneous neuropsychiatric syndromes, showing different baseline predictors and distinctive cognitive patterns.
anxiety; apathy; depression; stroke; vascular cognitive impairment
Settore PSIC-01/B - Neuropsicologia e neuroscienze cognitive
set-2025
15-set-2025
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/2434/1200335
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