Psychiatry Neuroimaging Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Psychiatry Neuroimaging Branch, Department of Psychiatry and Psychotherapy, University Medical Center Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany.
Psychiatry Neuroimaging Laboratory, Department of Psychiatry, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA; Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
J Affect Disord. 2022 Oct 1;314:78-85. doi: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.06.043. Epub 2022 Jun 30.
Alterations in the peripheral inflammatory profile and white matter (WM) deterioration are frequent in Major Depressive Disorder (MDD). The present study applies free-water imaging to investigate the relationship between altered peripheral inflammation and WM microstructure and their predictive value in determining response to ketamine treatment in MDD.
Ten individuals with MDD underwent diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging and a blood-draw before and 24 h after ketamine infusion. We utilized MANCOVAs and ANCOVAs to compare tissue-specific fractional anisotropy (FA) and free-water (FW) of the forceps and cingulum, and the ratio of pro-inflammatory interleukin(IL)-8/anti-inflammatory IL-10 between individuals with MDD and 15 healthy controls at baseline. Next, we compared all baseline measures between ketamine responders (6) and non-responders (4) and analyzed changes in imaging and blood data after ketamine infusion.
The MDD group exhibited an increased IL-8/IL-10 ratio compared to controls at baseline (p = .040), which positively correlated with average FW across regions of interest (p = .013). Ketamine responders demonstrated higher baseline FA in the left cingulum than non-responders (p = .023). Ketamine infusion did not influence WM microstructure but decreased the IL-8/IL-10 ratio (p = .043).
The small sample size and short follow-up period limit the conclusion regarding the longer-term effects of ketamine in MDD.
This pilot study provides evidence for the role of inflammation in MDD by illustrating an association between peripheral inflammation and WM microstructure. Additionally, we demonstrate that free-water diffusion-weighted imaging might be a valuable tool to determine which individuals with MDD benefit from the anti-inflammatory mediated effects of ketamine treatment.
在重度抑郁症(MDD)中,外周炎症谱的改变和白质(WM)恶化很常见。本研究应用自由水成像来研究外周炎症改变与 WM 微观结构之间的关系及其在预测 MDD 患者对氯胺酮治疗反应中的价值。
10 名 MDD 患者在氯胺酮输注前后进行弥散加权磁共振成像和血液采集。我们使用 MANCOVA 和 ANCOVA 来比较 MDD 患者和 15 名健康对照者在基线时的夹钳和胼胝体的组织特异性各向异性分数(FA)和自由水(FW)以及促炎白细胞介素(IL)-8/抗炎白细胞介素(IL)-10 的比值。接下来,我们比较了氯胺酮反应者(6 名)和非反应者(4 名)的所有基线测量值,并分析了氯胺酮输注后影像学和血液数据的变化。
MDD 组在基线时与对照组相比,IL-8/IL-10 比值升高(p=.040),与感兴趣区的平均 FW 呈正相关(p=.013)。氯胺酮反应者的左侧胼胝体 FA 基线高于非反应者(p=.023)。氯胺酮输注并未影响 WM 微观结构,但降低了 IL-8/IL-10 比值(p=.043)。
样本量小和随访时间短限制了氯胺酮治疗 MDD 的长期影响的结论。
本研究为炎症在 MDD 中的作用提供了证据,表明外周炎症与 WM 微观结构之间存在关联。此外,我们证明自由水扩散加权成像可能是一种有价值的工具,可以确定哪些 MDD 患者受益于氯胺酮治疗的抗炎介导作用。