| Literature DB >> 16623937 |
Mitchell B Max1, Tianxia Wu, Steven J Atlas, Robert R Edwards, Jennifer A Haythornthwaite, Antonella F Bollettino, Heather S Hipp, Colin D McKnight, Inge A Osman, Erin N Crawford, Maryland Pao, Jemiel Nejim, Albert Kingman, Daniel C Aisen, Michele A Scully, Robert B Keller, David Goldman, Inna Belfer.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Pain patients are often depressed and anxious, and benefit less from psychotropic drugs than pain-free patients. We hypothesize that this partial resistance is due to the unique neurochemical contribution to mood by afferent pain projections through the spino-parabrachial-hypothalamic-amygdalar systems and their projections to other mood-mediating systems. New psychotropic drugs for pain patients might target molecules in such brain systems. We propose a method to prioritize molecular targets by studying polymorphic genes in cohorts of patients undergoing surgical procedures associated with a variable pain relief response. We seek molecules that show a significant statistical interaction between (1) the amount of surgical pain relief, and (2) the alleles of the gene, on depression and anxiety during the first postoperative year.Entities:
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Year: 2006 PMID: 16623937 PMCID: PMC1488826 DOI: 10.1186/1744-8069-2-14
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Mol Pain ISSN: 1744-8069 Impact factor: 3.395
Figure 1Hypothesis regarding variability in depression and anxiety observed one year after lumbar discectomy. Two types of genetic contribution to one-year mood scores are shown. (1) currently studied by biological psychiatrists may contribute to the late mood effects of a stressful surgical illness. Because the diagnosis and treatment are shared by all participants, and one can measure residual pain and surgical delay as "environmental variables" and correct for their effect on moo, this design may enhance the sensitivity to detect gene effects, compared to designs that study affective disorders in patients with widely varying life stressors. These influences would show up in the statistical analysis as main effects on late mood. (2) may alter the direct effects of pain upon mood, possibly by effects on signaling molecules in the dense connections between spinal pain afferent inputs and mood-processing brain structures such as hypothalamus, amygdala, nucleus accumbens, medial orbital cortex, and cingulum. These gene effects would vary with the amount of residual chronic pain after surgery; i.e., they would show up as significant interactions between gene and pain levels in their effects upon mood.
Figure 2Baseline mood vs. pain in 277 patients with subacute sciatica, regardless of subsequent surgical or nonsurgical treatment. Overall intensity of "bodily pain" over the month before seeing a surgeon for sciatica explains about 13% of the variance in depressive and anxious feelings over the same period (p < 0.0001), assessed by the five-item SF-36 Mental Health Subscale (top panel). Higher scores on the y axis correspond to better mood. The other panels show similar relations to pain of the three items of the subscale pertaining to depressed mood (middle) and the two items pertaining to anxiety (bottom).
Contributions of the variables to baseline SF-36 Mental Health scores
| Correlation (r) with | ||||||
| Mean | STD | Baseline SF36-MH | R2 | p-value | ||
| Baseline bodily pain | 3.67 | 1.12 | -0.36 | 0.130 | <0.0001 | |
| Age | 41.8 | 10.6 | 0.15 | 0.023 | 0.0121 | |
| Baseline SF36-MH | ||||||
| Category | n | Mean | STD | |||
| Sex | Male | 166 | 61.25 | 19.88 | 0.002 | 0.5065 |
| Female | 110 | 62.95 | 19.35 | |||
| Workers' compensation | Yes | 105 | 56.15 | 20.53 | 0.052 | 0.0001 |
| No | 171 | 65.47 | 18.27 | |||
| Length of episode | <=6 week | 54 | 68.52 | 18.99 | 0.033 | 0.0109 |
| 6–26 weeks | 133 | 61.29 | 17.95 | |||
| >26 weeks | 89 | 58.88 | 21.68 | 0.006 | 0.2024 | |
| Comorbid illnesses | Yes | 69 | 59.36 | 19.81 | ||
| No | 207 | 62.78 | 19.58 | |||
| R2 from the model including all above variables | ||||||
Note: R2 was calculated using the model including only one variable.
SF-36 MH scores range from 0–100, where 100 means "always happy and calm over past month."
280 (surgical+ non-surgical) patients have DNA, four patients, 3 missing baseline SF36-MH and 1 missing baseline bodily pain, were dropped from analysis
In covariate selection, linear regression with backward selection method (p = 0.1) was applied, where baseline Sf36-MH was dependent variables, age, sex, workers' compensation, baseline bodily pain, comorbid illnesses, patient group (nonsurgical vs. surgical), marital status, education, and prior episodes were independent variables, and age, sex and workers' compensation were fixed in the model
Figure 3Pain and mood over time after surgical discectomy. In each panel, the four curves represent subgroups of 153 surgical patients divided according to the percentage reduction in "bodily pain" from the baseline to the three month rating. Top left: Bodily pain plotted against time over three years postoperatively. Top right: SF-36 Mental Health scores plotted against time. Higher values on the y axis correspond to less depressed or anxious feelings. Note that mood sharply improves at the first postoperative point in the three subgroups of patients with 25–100% reduction in pain, but mood does not worsen in the group with minimal pain relief. Bottom: The items specifically related to depression (left) and anxiety (right) show similar relations to pain reduction.
Figure 4Individual variation in improvement in mood over first year after discectomy plotted against the percent of bodily pain reduction produced by surgery. Each point represents one patient.
Contributions of the variables to 1-year SF-36 Mental Health scores
| Correlation (r) with | ||||||
| Mean | STD | 1 year SF36-MH | R2 | p-value | ||
| Mean bodily pain at 3 and 6 month | 2.03 | 1.11 | -0.450 | 0.203 | <0.0001 | |
| Baseline SF36-MH | 61.62 | 18.15 | 0.436 | 0.190 | <0.0001 | |
| Baseline bodily pain | 3.9 | 0.99 | 0.118 | 0.014 | 0.1642 | |
| Age | 42.84 | 10.07 | 0.042 | 0.002 | 0.623 | |
| 1 year SF36-MH | ||||||
| Category | n | Mean | STD | |||
| Sex | Male | 86 | 74.88 | 20.34 | 0.001 | 0.724 |
| Female | 55 | 73.60 | 21.92 | |||
| Workers' compensation | Yes | 42 | 68.00 | 25.05 | 0.040 | 0.018 |
| No | 99 | 77.09 | 18.44 | |||
| Crossover | 0 month | 120 | 76.83 | 18.54 | 0.079 | 0.001 |
| 3 or 6 month | 21 | 60.38 | 28.03 | |||
| R2 from the model including all above variables | ||||||
Note: R2 was calculated using the model including only one variable.
In covariate selection, linear regression with backward selection method (p = 0.1) was applied, where 1 year SF-36 MH was the dependent variable; age, sex, workers' compensation, baseline bodily pain, prior episodes, and the SF-36 General Health, Vitality, Social Function, and Emotional Role subscales were independent variables; and age, sex and workers' compensation were fixed in the model.
141 of 162 surgical patients with both 1 year mood data and all 7 covariates and DNA were used in the 1 year mood analysis.
"Crossover" refers to the time point when a questionnaire showed that a patient who initially chose nonsurgical treatment underwent lumbar discectomy.
Figure 5Galanin-2 receptor gene. Physical locations of the four genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Coding exons are shown as solid blocks. SNP locations are from the SNP Browser software and the Panther Classification System public database, February, 2006. P values for the effect on one-year SF-36 Mental Health scores of the SNP x 3–6 month pain interaction term are shown above each SNP.
Figure 6Pattern of interaction between galanin-2 receptor SNP and residual pain upon 12-month mood score. SNP rs8836 showed a significant interaction term in the recessive model (p = 0.003, uncorrected for multiple tests). The 12 month SF-36 MH mood scores are plotted against the mean of bodily pain scores at 3 and 6 mos. Each point is the mean 12-month mood for all of the patients with that bodily pain score and genotype. The curve connecting the triangles represents 33 patients homozygous for the uncommon allele; the curve connecting the filled circles represents 93 patients with one or no copies of the uncommon allele. In the presence of high residual postoperative pain, 2 copies of the uncommon allele appear to be associated with relative protection against symptoms of depression and anxiety, but the small numbers of such patients make this result illustrative, not statistically persuasive.
Figure 7Mu opioid receptor gene. Physical locations of the eight genotyped single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs). Coding exons are shown as solid blocks. SNP locations are from SNP Browser software and the Panther Classification System public database, February, 2006. P values for the effect on one-year SF-36 Mental Health scores of the SNP x 3–6 month pain interaction term are shown above each SNP. SNP #1 m tge wekk-known Asn 40 Asp polymorphism, was not associated with mood scores.
Figure 8Pattern of interaction between mu opioid receptor SNP and baseline pain upon baseline mood score. SNP rs495491 was one of the three SNPs that showed a significant interaction term in the recessive model (p = 0.003, uncorrected for multiple tests). The baseline SF-36 MH mood scores are plotted against the baseline bodily pain scores. Each point is the mean baseline mood for all of the patients with that bodily pain score and genotype. The curve connecting the triangles represents 17 patients homozygous for the uncommon allele; the curve connecting the diamonds represents the 252 patients with one or no copies of the uncommon allele. In the presence of high baseline pain, 2 copies of the uncommon allele appear to be associated with symptoms of depression and anxiety, but the modest sample size and multiple genes tested make this result illustrative, not statistically persuasive. Data from patients with baseline pain of 0–2 (none, very mild, or mild) were pooled because few patients had such low pain scores at presentation.