# Association of Constipation and Geriatric Depressive Symptoms: Cross-Sectional Analysis Using Baseline Data from the JUSTICE-TOKYO Prospective Cohort Study

**Authors:** Hiroyuki Kiko, Daisuke Asaoka, Osamu Nomura, Yusuke Nomoto, Koji Sugano, Kei Matsuno, Yasuhiro Homma, Yuji Nishizaki, Naotake Yanagisawa, Tsutomu Takeda, Daiki Abe, Shotaro Oki, Nobuyuki Suzuki, Yoichi Akazawa, Kumiko Ueda, Hiroya Ueyama, Mariko Hojo, Akihito Nagahara, Hiroyuki Isayama, Katsumi Miyauchi

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/diagnostics15121537 · Diagnostics · 2025-06-17

## TL;DR

This study finds a link between constipation and depressive symptoms in older adults, but cannot determine which causes the other.

## Contribution

The study identifies constipation and related gastrointestinal quality of life as significant factors associated with geriatric depressive symptoms.

## Key findings

- GDS-15 scores were significantly correlated with constipation-related quality of life and constipation scoring system scores.
- Multiple regression analysis showed that constipation-related QOL and CSS scores were significant predictors of geriatric depressive symptoms.
- The study highlights the association between abdominal symptoms and depression in the elderly.

## Abstract

Objective: To clarify the relationship between constipation and depressive symptoms among the elderly. Methods: This single-center, cross-sectional study was performed using baseline data obtained at the time of enrollment in the prospective cohort of the JUSTICE-TOKYO study. Participants underwent assessments including patient profiling, drug use history, the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE), the Geriatric Depression Scale 15 (GDS-15), gastrointestinal-related quality of life (QOL), and the constipation scoring system (CSS). Geriatric depressive symptoms were evaluated based on GDS-15. We investigated correlations between GDS-15 scores and various abdominal symptoms and assessed risk factors for geriatric depressive symptoms using multiple regression analysis. Results: A total of 984 elderly participants (57% female, mean age 78.1 ± 6.1 year) were included. The GDS-15 scores were significantly correlated with body mass index (BMI) (r = −0.056) and MMSE (r = −0.092), reflex-related QOL (r = 0.253), pain-related QOL (r = 0.229), fullness-related QOL (r = 0.269), constipation-related QOL (r = 0.329), diarrhea-related QOL (r = 0.264), and CSS (r = 0.285) scores. Multiple regression analysis indicated that BMI (β = −0.069, p = 0.020) and MMSE (β = −0.074, p = 0.013), constipation-related QOL (β = 0.136, p = 0.002), reflex-related QOL (β = 0.126, p < 0.001), diarrhea-related QOL (β = 0.095, p = 0.006), and CSS (β = 0.098, p = 0.016) scores were significantly correlated with GDS-15 scores. Conclusions: Depressive symptoms among older individuals are associated with various abdominal symptoms, particularly constipation. However, the causality between depressive symptoms and constipation cannot be inferred due to the study’s cross-sectional design.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** Constipation (MESH:D003248), pain (MESH:D010146), diarrhea (MESH:D003967), Depressive symptoms (MESH:D003866), abdominal symptoms (MESH:D000007)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

49 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12192452/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12192452