Department of Psychological Medicine, Institute of Psychiatry, Psychology and Neuroscience (Pitharouli, Hotopf, Pariante), and Social, Genetic and Developmental Psychiatry Centre (Pitharouli, Hagenaars, Glanville, Coleman, Lewis), King's College London, London; National Institute for Health Research, Maudsley Biomedical Research Centre, South London and Maudsley National Health Service Foundation Trust, London (Hotopf, Lewis, Pariante).
Am J Psychiatry. 2021 Jun;178(6):522-529. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2020.20060947. Epub 2021 May 14.
The authors investigated the pathways (genetic, environmental, lifestyle, medical) leading to inflammation in major depressive disorder using C-reactive protein (CRP), genetic, and phenotypic data from the UK Biobank.
This was a case-control study of 26,894 participants with a lifetime diagnosis of major depressive disorder from the Composite International Diagnostic Interview and 59,001 control subjects who reported no mental disorder and had not reported taking any antidepressant medication. Linear regression models of log CRP level were fitted to regress out the effects of age, sex, body mass index (BMI), and smoking and to test whether the polygenic risk score (PRS) for major depression was associated with log CRP level and whether the association between log CRP level and major depression remained after adjusting for early-life trauma, socioeconomic status, and self-reported health status.
CRP levels were significantly higher in patients with depression relative to control subjects (2.4 mg/L compared with 2.1 mg/L, respectively), and more case than control subjects had CRP levels >3 mg/L (21.2% compared with 16.8%, respectively), indicating low-grade inflammation. The PRS for depression was positively and significantly associated with log CRP levels, but this association was no longer significant after adjustment for BMI and smoking. The association between depression and increased log CRP level was substantially reduced, but still remained significant, after adjustment for the aforementioned clinical and sociodemographic factors.
The data indicate that the "genetic" contribution to increased inflammation in depression is due to regulation of eating and smoking habits rather than an "autoimmune" genetic predisposition. Moreover, the association between depression and increased inflammation even after full adjustment indicates either the presence of yet unknown or unmeasured psychosocial and clinical confounding factors or that a core biological association between depression and increased inflammation exists independently from confounders.
作者利用英国生物银行的 C 反应蛋白(CRP)、遗传和表型数据,研究导致重度抑郁症炎症的途径(遗传、环境、生活方式、医疗)。
这是一项基于病例对照的研究,共纳入 26894 名参与者,他们通过复合国际诊断访谈(Composite International Diagnostic Interview)被诊断为有终生重度抑郁症病史,共纳入 59001 名对照参与者,他们报告没有精神障碍,且没有服用任何抗抑郁药物。采用线性回归模型拟合 CRP 水平的对数,以消除年龄、性别、体重指数(BMI)和吸烟的影响,并检验重度抑郁症的多基因风险评分(PRS)是否与 CRP 水平相关,以及 CRP 水平与重度抑郁症之间的关联在调整了早发性创伤、社会经济地位和自我报告的健康状况后是否仍然存在。
与对照组相比,患有抑郁症的患者 CRP 水平显著升高(分别为 2.4mg/L 和 2.1mg/L),且病例组中 CRP 水平>3mg/L 的患者比例高于对照组(分别为 21.2%和 16.8%),提示存在低度炎症。抑郁症的 PRS 与 CRP 水平呈正相关且具有统计学意义,但调整 BMI 和吸烟因素后,这种相关性不再显著。调整上述临床和社会人口统计学因素后,抑郁症与 CRP 水平升高之间的关联显著降低,但仍具有统计学意义。
数据表明,抑郁症中炎症增加的“遗传”贡献归因于对饮食和吸烟习惯的调节,而不是“自身免疫”的遗传易感性。此外,即使在充分调整后,抑郁症与炎症增加之间仍存在关联,这表明存在未知或未被测量的心理社会和临床混杂因素,或者抑郁症与炎症增加之间存在独立于混杂因素的核心生物学关联。