Department of Epidemiology, University of Pittsburgh Graduate School of Public Health, A742 Crabtree Hall, 130 DeSoto Street, Pittsburgh, PA 15261, USA.
Public Health Nutr. 2012 Jun;15(6):1078-86. doi: 10.1017/S1368980011002904. Epub 2011 Dec 8.
Major depressive disorder (MDD) during pregnancy increases the risk of adverse maternal and infant outcomes. Maternal nutritional status may be a modifiable risk factor for antenatal depression. We evaluated the association between patterns in mid-pregnancy nutritional biomarkers and MDD.
Prospective cohort study.
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, USA.
Women who enrolled at ≤20 weeks' gestation and had a diagnosis of MDD made with the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 4th edition) at 20-, 30- and 36-week study visits. A total of 135 women contributed 345 person-visits. Non-fasting blood drawn at enrolment was assayed for red cell essential fatty acids, plasma folate, homocysteine and ascorbic acid; serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D, retinol, vitamin E, carotenoids, ferritin and soluble transferrin receptors. Nutritional biomarkers were entered into principal components analysis.
Three factors emerged: Factor 1, Essential Fatty Acids; Factor 2, Micronutrients; and Factor 3, Carotenoids. MDD was prevalent in 21·5 % of women. In longitudinal multivariable logistic models, there was no association between the Essential Fatty Acids or Micronutrients pattern and MDD either before or after adjustment for employment, education or pre-pregnancy BMI. In unadjusted analysis, women with factor scores for Carotenoids in the middle and upper tertiles were 60 % less likely than women in the bottom tertile to have MDD during pregnancy, but after adjustment for confounders the associations were no longer statistically significant.
While meaningful patterns were derived using nutritional biomarkers, significant associations with MDD were not observed in multivariable adjusted analyses. Larger, more diverse samples are needed to understand nutrition-depression relationships during pregnancy.
怀孕期间的重度抑郁症(MDD)会增加母婴不良结局的风险。孕产妇营养状况可能是产前抑郁的一个可改变的危险因素。我们评估了妊娠中期营养生物标志物模式与 MDD 之间的关系。
前瞻性队列研究。
美国宾夕法尼亚州匹兹堡。
在 20 周妊娠≤时入组且在 20、30 和 36 周研究访视时使用 DSM-IV 结构化临床访谈(精神障碍诊断与统计手册,第 4 版)诊断为 MDD 的女性。共有 135 名女性贡献了 345 人次就诊。在入组时采集非空腹血样,检测红细胞必需脂肪酸、血浆叶酸、同型半胱氨酸和抗坏血酸;血清 25-羟维生素 D、视黄醇、维生素 E、类胡萝卜素、铁蛋白和可溶性转铁蛋白受体。将营养生物标志物输入主成分分析。
出现了 3 个因子:因子 1,必需脂肪酸;因子 2,微量营养素;因子 3,类胡萝卜素。21.5%的女性患有 MDD。在纵向多变量逻辑模型中,无论是否调整就业、教育或孕前 BMI,必需脂肪酸或微量营养素模式与 MDD 均无关联。在未调整分析中,类胡萝卜素因子得分处于中间和上三分位数的女性在怀孕期间患 MDD 的可能性比处于下三分位数的女性低 60%,但在调整混杂因素后,关联不再具有统计学意义。
虽然使用营养生物标志物得出了有意义的模式,但在多变量调整分析中,与 MDD 没有观察到显著关联。需要更大、更多样化的样本才能了解怀孕期间的营养与抑郁之间的关系。