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Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
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Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
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Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study

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Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study
Journal Article

Prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression and the association of urinary albumin with all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in affected individuals: a National population-based study

2025
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Overview
Introduction Individual who have both diabetes and depression are at a higher risk of experiencing adverse health outcomes. However, the association between urine albumin levels and mortality in individuals with both diabetes and depression has not been examined. Materials and methods We estimate the prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression within the National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey (NHANES) cohort. Subsequently, we examined the association between urinary protein levels and both all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in this population. Individuals were divided into three groups based on urinary protein concentrations: Quantile 1 to Quantile 3. Results The prevalence of coexisting diabetes and depression was found to be 1.91%, rising from 1.07% in 2005 to 2.11% in 2018. During a median follow-up period of 75 months, the all-cause mortality in Quantiles 1, 2, and 3 were 50 (11.26%), 60 (17.17%), and 106 (29.22%) cases, respectively ( p  < 0.001). Cardiovascular mortality was also higher in Quantile 2 (6.30%) and Quantile 3 (7.54%) compared to Quantile 1 (1.66%). After adjusting for potential confounding factors, elevated urine albumin levels remained independently related to a higher risk of all-cause mortality (Quantile 3 vs. Quantile 1: HR = 3.04, 95% CI: 1.71 to 5.39) as well as cardiovascular mortality (Quantile 3 vs. Quantile 1: HR = 3.55, 95% CI: 1.44 to 8.76). Conclusions The prevalence of concurrent diabetes and depression has risen notably, and higher urine albumin levels are independently related to a high risk of both all-cause and cardiovascular mortality in individuals who have both conditions.