Sen Srijan, Kranzler Henry R, Krystal John H, Speller Heather, Chan Grace, Gelernter Joel, Guille Constance
Department of Psychiatry, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI 48109, USA.
Arch Gen Psychiatry. 2010 Jun;67(6):557-65. doi: 10.1001/archgenpsychiatry.2010.41. Epub 2010 Apr 5.
Although the prevalence of depression among medical interns substantially exceeds that of the general population, the specific factors responsible are not well understood. Recent reports of a moderating effect of a genetic polymorphism (5-HTTLPR) in the serotonin transporter protein gene on the likelihood that life stress will precipitate depression may help to understand the development of mood symptoms in medical interns.
To identify psychological, demographic, and residency program factors that are associated with depression among interns and to use medical internship as a model to study the moderating effects of this polymorphism.
A prospective cohort study.
Thirteen US hospitals.
Seven hundred forty interns entering participating residency programs.
Subjects were assessed for depressive symptoms using the 9-item Patient Health Questionnaire (PHQ-9), a series of psychological traits, and the 5-HTTLPR genotype prior to internship and then assessed for depressive symptoms and potential stressors at 3-month intervals during internship.
The PHQ-9 depression score increased from 2.4 prior to internship to a mean of 6.4 during internship (P < .001). The proportion of participants who met PHQ-9 criteria for depression increased from 3.9% prior to internship to a mean of 25.7% during internship (P < .001). A series of factors measured prior to internship (female sex, US medical education, difficult early family environment, history of major depression, lower baseline depressive symptom score, and higher neuroticism) and during internship (increased work hours, perceived medical errors, and stressful life events) was associated with a greater increase in depressive symptoms during internship. In addition, subjects with at least 1 copy of a less-transcribed 5-HTTLPR allele reported a greater increase in depressive symptoms under the stress of internship (P = .002).
There is a marked increase in depressive symptoms during medical internship. Specific individual, internship, and genetic factors are associated with the increase in depressive symptoms.
尽管医学实习生中抑郁症的患病率显著高于普通人群,但导致这一现象的具体因素尚不清楚。最近有报道称,血清素转运蛋白基因中的一种基因多态性(5-HTTLPR)对生活压力引发抑郁症的可能性具有调节作用,这可能有助于理解医学实习生情绪症状的发展。
确定与实习生抑郁症相关的心理、人口统计学和住院医师培训项目因素,并以医学实习为模型研究这种多态性的调节作用。
一项前瞻性队列研究。
美国13家医院。
740名进入参与住院医师培训项目的实习生。
在实习前,使用9项患者健康问卷(PHQ-9)、一系列心理特质和5-HTTLPR基因型对受试者进行抑郁症状评估,然后在实习期间每隔3个月对抑郁症状和潜在压力源进行评估。
PHQ-9抑郁评分从实习前的2.4分增加到实习期间的平均6.4分(P <.001)。符合PHQ-9抑郁症标准的参与者比例从实习前的3.9%增加到实习期间的平均25.7%(P <.001)。实习前测量的一系列因素(女性、美国医学教育、早期家庭环境困难、重度抑郁症病史、较低的基线抑郁症状评分和较高的神经质)以及实习期间的因素(工作时间增加、感知到的医疗差错和压力性生活事件)与实习期间抑郁症状的更大增加相关。此外,至少有1份转录较少的5-HTTLPR等位基因拷贝的受试者在实习压力下报告的抑郁症状增加更大(P =.002)。
医学实习期间抑郁症状显著增加。特定的个体、实习和遗传因素与抑郁症状的增加有关。