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Journal Article

Citation

Wang TM, Lee YL, Chung CH, Sun CA, Kang CY, Wu GJ, Chien WC. Int. J. Women. Health 2023; 15: 1865-1882.

Copyright

(Copyright © 2023, Dove Press)

DOI

10.2147/IJWH.S430252

PMID

38046265

PMCID

PMC10693200

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: A multitude of previous studies has substantiated that endometriosis correlated highly with psychiatric health. This study aims to investigate the association between endometriosis and psychiatric health.

METHODS: Utilizing the National Health Insurance Research Database of Taiwan, 100,770 enrolled participants, including 20,154 patients with endometriosis and 80,616 in the control group (1:4), matched for age, and index date from Taiwan's Longitudinal Health Insurance Database between January 1, 2000, and December 31, 2015. The Cox proportional regression model was used to compare the risk of mental disorders during the 16 years of follow-up after adjusting for confounding factors.

RESULTS: Of the study patients, 4083 (20.26%) developed mental disorders; 9225 of the 80,616 controls (11.44%) developed mental disorders. The Cox regression demonstrated that, after adjusting for age, monthly income, urbanization level, etc., people with endometriosis are more likely to suffer from mental disorders compared to those without endometriosis (hazard ratio [HR]=2.131; 95% confidence interval [CI]= 1.531-2.788; p<0.001). The result illustrated that women over 40 years old had a more significant risk.

CONCLUSION: Compared to people without endometriosis, this study provides evidence that patients with endometriosis are at a 2.131-fold higher risk of developing mental disorders, especially in elder women. Regular psychiatric follow-up might be needed for those patients.


Language: en

Keywords

women; cohort study; endometriosis; mental disorders; national health insurance research database; Taiwan

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