| Literature DB >> 22701706 |
Premananda Indic1, Greg Murray, Carlo Maggini, Mario Amore, Tiziana Meschi, Loris Borghi, Ross J Baldessarini, Paola Salvatore.
Abstract
Major depression occurs at high prevalence in the general population, often starts in juvenile years, recurs over a lifetime, and is strongly associated with disability and suicide. Searches for biological markers in depression may have been hindered by assuming that depression is a unitary and relatively homogeneous disorder, mainly of mood, rather than addressing particular, clinically crucial features or diagnostic subtypes. Many studies have implicated quantitative alterations of motility rhythms in depressed human subjects. Since a candidate feature of great public-health significance is the unusually high risk of suicidal behavior in depressive disorders, we studied correlations between a measure (vulnerability index [VI]) derived from multi-scale characteristics of daily-motility rhythms in depressed subjects (n = 36) monitored with noninvasive, wrist-worn, electronic actigraphs and their self-assessed level of suicidal thinking operationalized as a wish to die. Patient-subjects had a stable clinical diagnosis of bipolar-I, bipolar-II, or unipolar major depression (n = 12 of each type). VI was associated inversely with suicidal thinking (r = -0.61 with all subjects and r = -0.73 with bipolar disorder subjects; both p<0.0001) and distinguished patients with bipolar versus unipolar major depression with a sensitivity of 91.7% and a specificity of 79.2%. VI may be a useful biomarker of characteristic features of major depression, contribute to differentiating bipolar and unipolar depression, and help to detect risk of suicide. An objective biomarker of suicide-risk could be advantageous when patients are unwilling or unable to share suicidal thinking with clinicians.Entities:
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Year: 2012 PMID: 22701706 PMCID: PMC3373552 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0038761
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Characterization of multi-scale amplitude of motility data by wavelet analysis from a representative subject with major depression.
(a) Raw data in arbitrary units (a.u), with amplitudes of rhythms detected at three time-scales. Subject shows a disrupted activity profile due to disturbed sleep/wake cycle which is common in depressed subjects. (b) Rescaled probability distribution of amplitude obtained by rescaling using P to provide unit area of amplitude at a range of time-scales up to 2 hours. (c) The same data, log-transformed and showing a long-tail, which share most of the values of log (AP. (d) Gamma-distribution function fit of the amplitude distribution at a scale of 0.58 hours. The goodness-of-fit is determined by Akaike information criteria in comparison with other distributions (20). (e) The shape parameter obtained from the Gamma-function fit decreases at short time-scales and increases at long time-scales. VI is obtained by finding the area under the curve.
Characteristics of patients with major depression by DSM-IV diagnostic types.
| Characteristics | All Cases | Bipolar-I | Bipolar-II | Unipolar | κ2 or |
|
| Cases (n) | 36 | 12 | 12 | 12 | – | – |
| Women (%) | 75.0 | 75.0 | 58.3 | 91.7 | 3.55 | 0.23 |
| Age (years) | 46.1±12.7 | 41.7±10.3 | 49.6±14.6 | 47.0±12.4 | 1.24 | 0.30 |
| HDRS depression rating | 30.4±2.21 | 30.5±2.28 | 30.9±1.88 | 29.7±2.42 | 1.00 | 0.379 |
| Vulnerability index ( | 2.84±0.94 | 2.85±0.76 | 2.04±0.60 | 3.63±0.70 | 16.0 | <0.0001 |
|
| ||||||
| Vital drive (wish to live) | 12.0±12.4 | 4.94±8.92 | 12.2±12.4 | 18.7±12.3 | 4.46 | 0.02 |
| Suicidal thoughts (wish to die) | 2.20±2.44 | 1.76±1.95 | 3.53±2.42 | 1.28±2.50 | 3.18 | 0.05 |
| Depression | 25.5±15.6 | 24.0±17.7 | 31.6±16.3 | 20.8±11.6 | 1.54 | 0.23 |
| Unusual bodily sensations | 4.76±7.74 | 5.70±11.3 | 3.80±4.40 | 4.84±6.50 | 0.16 | 0.85 |
| Anxiety | 2.55±3.38 | 1.72±2.56 | 3.03±3.36 | 2.90±4.17 | 0.54 | 0.59 |
| Dysphoria | 6.80±5.90 | 6.01±8.20 | 7.98±4.51 | 6.31±4.52 | 0.38 | 0.69 |
| Autonomic symptoms | 6.44±6.52 | 3.38±4.50 | 8.86±6.86 | 7.10±7.13 | 2.39 | 0.85 |
|
| 60.3±39.8 | 47.6±38.7 | 72.3±40.8 | 61.9±39.6 | 1.08 | 0.35 |
| Clinician-rated dysphoria (%) | 63.9 | 41.7 | 100.0 | 50.0 | 10.4 | 0.005 |
Statistical tests for diagnostic differences: for continuous variables, one-way ANOVA [df = 2; 33] (F); for categorical values, contingency tables [df = 2] (χ2). Bonferroni-adjusted criterion p<0.004 (0.05/13). Data are means ±SD unless stated otherwise. HRSD: Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression.
Figure 2Relationship of VI to self-rated suicidal ideation in subjects with major depression.
The negative correlation between VI and self-rated suicidal ideation (r = –0.61) is highly significant (p<0.0001) among depressed subjects (n = 36 bipolar I and II and unipolar major depressive disorder subjects).
Multiple linear regression model of factors associated with higher vulnerability index (VI) scores.
| Factors | Slope (β) [95%CI] |
|
|
| Unipolar > bipolar depression | 0.946 [+0.469 to+1.42] | 4.04 | <0.0001 |
|
| –0.199 [–0.302 to –0.096] | 3.94 | <0.0001 |
| Self-rated depression | +0.005 [+0.011 to+0.021] | 0.66 | 0.512 |
VI score was associated more strongly with unipolar than bipolar (I or II) depression and with lower self-ratings of suicidal ideation or wish to die, but was not associated with self-reported depressed mood. Factors not associated with VI score included sex, age, clinician-rated dysphoria, and self-ratings of dysphoria, vital drive, anxiety, unusual bodily experiences, autonomic symptoms, or total morbidity.
Figure 3Relationship of VI to self-rated suicidal ideation in bipolar-illness subjects with major depression.
The negative correlation between VI and self-rated suicidal ideation (r = –0.73) is highly significant (p<0.0001) among bipolar depressed subjects (n = 24 bipolar I and II disorder subjects).