Webb M'Balu, Davies Melanie, Ashra Nuzhat, Bodicoat Danielle, Brady Emer, Webb David, Moulton Calum, Ismail Khalida, Khunti Kamlesh
National Institute for Health Research Biomedical Research Centre-Leicester, University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester, England.
The Leicester Diabetes Centre, University Hospitals of Leicester, Leicester General Hospital, Leicester, England.
PLoS One. 2017 Nov 30;12(11):e0187448. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0187448. eCollection 2017.
Depression has been shown to be associated with elevated leptin levels, low-grade inflammation and insulin resistance. These derangements are often measured in mixed gender cohorts despite the different body compositions and hormonal environments of men and women and gender-specific prevalence and responses to depression.
A cross-sectional analysis was carried out on a cohort of 639 participants from the ADDITION-Leicester dataset to assess differences in markers of diabetes risk, cardiovascular risk and inflammation in depressed and non-depressed individuals. Depressive symptoms were determined using the WHO (Five) well-being index. Multivariate linear and logistic regression analyses were adjusted for age, sex, ethnicity, body mass index, smoking, social deprivation and activity levels for continuous and binary variables respectively. Further analysis included stratifying the data by gender as well as assessing the interaction between depression and gender by including an interaction term in the model.
Women with depressive symptoms had a 5.3% larger waist circumference (p = 0.003), 28.7% higher HOMA IR levels (p = 0.026), 6.6% higher log-leptin levels (p = 0.01) and 22.37% higher TNF-α levels (p = 0.015) compared with women without. Conversely, depressive symptoms in men were associated with 7.8% lower body fat % (p = 0.015) but 48.7% higher CRP levels (p = 0.031) compared to men without. However, interaction analysis failed to show a significant difference between men and women.
Depressive symptoms are associated with metabolic derangements. Whilst women tended to show elevations in biomarkers related to an increased risk of type 2 diabetes (HOMA IR, leptin and TNF-α), men showed a marked increase in the cardiovascular disease risk biomarker CRP. However, perhaps due to the cohort size, interaction analysis did not show a significant gender difference.
抑郁症已被证明与瘦素水平升高、低度炎症和胰岛素抵抗有关。尽管男性和女性的身体组成和激素环境不同,且抑郁症的患病率和反应存在性别差异,但这些紊乱情况通常在混合性别的队列中进行测量。
对来自ADDITION-莱斯特数据集的639名参与者进行横断面分析,以评估抑郁和非抑郁个体在糖尿病风险、心血管风险和炎症标志物方面的差异。使用世界卫生组织(五维度)幸福感指数确定抑郁症状。分别对连续变量和二元变量进行多变量线性和逻辑回归分析,并对年龄、性别、种族、体重指数、吸烟、社会剥夺和活动水平进行调整。进一步的分析包括按性别对数据进行分层,以及通过在模型中纳入交互项来评估抑郁与性别的交互作用。
与没有抑郁症状的女性相比,有抑郁症状的女性腰围大5.3%(p = 0.003),HOMA-IR水平高28.7%(p = 0.026),对数瘦素水平高6.6%(p = 0.01),TNF-α水平高22.37%(p = 0.015)。相反,与没有抑郁症状的男性相比,有抑郁症状的男性体脂百分比低7.8%(p = 0.015),但CRP水平高48.7%(p = 0.031)。然而,交互分析未能显示出男性和女性之间的显著差异。
抑郁症状与代谢紊乱有关。虽然女性往往表现出与2型糖尿病风险增加相关的生物标志物升高(HOMA-IR、瘦素和TNF-α),但男性的心血管疾病风险生物标志物CRP显著增加。然而,可能由于队列规模的原因,交互分析未显示出显著的性别差异。