OBJECTIVE: To compare the clinical importance (association with illness severity and survival) of depressive and HIV symptoms among
veterans with HIV infection.
DESIGN: Cross-sectional study; survival analysis.
SETTING: Infectious Disease Clinics at 3 VA Medical Centers.
PARTICIPANTS: HIV-infected patients (N=881) and their health care providers from June 1999 through July 2000.
MEASUREMENTS AND MAIN RESULTS: Depressive symptoms were assessed using the 10-item Centers for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale (CES-D). Patient baseline
survey included an HIV Symptom Index measuring the frequency and bother of 20 common symptoms. Providers were surveyed on
patients’ illness severity, and survival data were obtained from VA death records. Of 881 patients, 46% had significant depressive
symptoms (CES-D ≥10). Increasing depression symptom severity was associated with increasing HIV symptom frequency (P<.001) and bother (P<.001). Multiple regression results revealed that having moderate or severe depressive symptoms was not associated with provider-reported
illness severity or survival. However, HIV symptoms were significantly associated with provider-reported illness severity
(P<.01) and survival (P=.05), after adjusting for moderate and severe depressive symptoms, CD4 cell count/mm3, viral load, age, race, and antiretroviral use.
CONCLUSIONS: Depression, while common in this sample, was not associated with illness severity or mortality after adjusting for HIV symptoms.
HIV symptoms are associated with severity of illness and survival regardless of patients’ severity of depressive symptoms.
This suggests that equal medical consideration should be given to HIV symptoms presented by HIV-infected patients regardless
of their depression status, rather than automatically attributing medical complaints to depression.
Key words HIV/AIDS - symptoms - depression
Data from this manuscript were presented at the Veterans Affairs Health Services Research and Development Annual Meeting,
March 23, 2000, Washington D.C.
The primary funding sources were from a National Institute of Aging (NIA) Career Development Award, a Robert Wood Johnson
Faculty Scholar Award, and an Inter-agency Agreement between the NIA, National Institute of Mental Health, and the Department
of Veterans Affairs (Dr. Justice, Pl). Dr. Rabeneck is the recipient of a VA Health Services Research and Development Advanced
Research Career Development Award.