| Literature DB >> 23672628 |
Brenda W J H Penninx1, Yuri Milaneschi, Femke Lamers, Nicole Vogelzangs.
Abstract
Depression is the most common psychiatric disorder worldwide. The burden of disease for depression goes beyond functioning and quality of life and extends to somatic health. Depression has been shown to subsequently increase the risk of, for example, cardiovascular, stroke, diabetes and obesity morbidity. These somatic consequences could partly be due to metabolic, immuno-inflammatory, autonomic and hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA)-axis dysregulations which have been suggested to be more often present among depressed patients. Evidence linking depression to metabolic syndrome abnormalities indicates that depression is especially associated with its obesity-related components (for example, abdominal obesity and dyslipidemia). In addition, systemic inflammation and hyperactivity of the HPA-axis have been consistently observed among depressed patients. Slightly less consistent observations are for autonomic dysregulation among depressed patients. The heterogeneity of the depression concept seems to play a differentiating role: metabolic syndrome and inflammation up-regulations appear more specific to the atypical depression subtype, whereas hypercortisolemia appears more specific for melancholic depression. This review finishes with potential treatment implications for the downward spiral in which different depressive symptom profiles and biological dysregulations may impact on each other and interact with somatic health decline.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23672628 PMCID: PMC3661358 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-129
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Meta-analyses examining the association between depression and incidence of mortality or morbidity in disease-free subjects
| Overall mortality | Cuijpers | 25 | 106,628 | 1.81 (1.58 to 2.07) |
| Heart disease | Nicholson | 21 | 124,509 | 1.81 (1.53 to 2.15) |
| Hypertension | Meng | 9 | 22,367 | 1.42 (1.09 to 1.86) |
| Stroke | Dong | 17 | 206,641 | 1.34 (1.17 to 1.54) |
| Diabetes | Mezuk | 13 | 212,019 | 1.60 (1.37 to 1.88) |
| Alzheimer’s disease | Gao | 4 | 5,656 | 1.66 (1.29 to 2.14) |
| Obesity (BMI ≥30) | Luppino | 9 | 6,436 | 1.58 (1.33 to 1.81) |
| Cancer | Chida | 25 | n.a. | 1.29 (1.14 to 1.46) |
BMI, Body mass index; CI, Confidence interval; n.a., Not available.
Overview of meta-analyses examining the cross-sectional association between biological dysregulations and depression status
| Metabolic dysregulation | ||||
| Metabolic syndrome | Pan | 29 | 155,333 | OR = 1.42 (1.28 to 1.57) |
| Abdominal obesity | Xu | 15 | 34,832 | OR = 1.38 (1.22 to 1.57) |
| Immuno-inflammatory dysregulation | ||||
| C-Reactive Protein | Howren | 49 | 51,234 | d = 0.15 (0.10 to 0.21) |
| Interleukin-6 | | 61 | 24,837 | d = 0.25 (0.18 to 0.31) |
| Interleukin-1β | | 14 | 756 | d = 0.35 (0.03 to 0.67) |
| Interleukin-1RA | | 9 | 1,214 | d = 0.25 (0.04 to 0.46) |
| Interleukin-6 | Dowlati | 16 | 892 | MD = 1.8 pg/mL (1.2 to 2.3) |
| TNF-α | | 13 | 788 | MD = 4.0 pg/mL (2.2 to 5.7) |
| Interleukin-1β | | 9 | 533 | MD = -1.6 pg/mL (-3.6 to 0.4) |
| Soluble Interleukin-2R | Liu | 8 | 596 | MD = 0.56 pg/mL (0.28 to 0.84) |
| Interleukin-6 | | 18 | 923 | MD = 0.68 pg/mL (0.44 to 0.92) |
| TNF-α | | 15 | 995 | MD = 0.55 pg/mL (0.13 to 0.99) |
| Interleukin-1β | | 10 | 580 | MD = -0.53 pg/mL (-1.36 to 0.31) |
| Autonomic dysregulation | ||||
| Heart rate variability | Rottenberg, 20072[ | 13 | 686 | d = 0.33 (0.18 to 0.49) |
| Heart rate variability | Kemp | 14 | 726 | Hedges’ g = -0.21 (-0.40 to -0.02)4 |
| HPA-axis dysregulation | ||||
| Higher cortisol 3 | Stetler and Miller 20111[ | 354 | 18,374 | d = 0.60 (0.54 to 0.66) |
| Higher ACTH | | 96 | 3,812 | d = 0.28 (0.16 to 0.41) |
| Higher CRH | | 16 | 888 | d = -0.53 (-1.71 to 0.65) |
| Saliva morning cortisol | Knorr | 20 | 2,318 | MD = 2.6 nmol/l (1.0 to 4.2) |
| Saliva evening cortisol | 10 | 1,617 | MD = 0.3 nmol/l (0.03 to 0.5) | |
ACTH, Adrenocorticotropin hormone; CI, Confidence interval; CRH, Corticotropin-releasing hormone; d, Cohen’s d; HPA, hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal; MD, Mean difference between depressed and non-depressed; OR, Odds ratio; TNF, Tumor necrosis factor.
1 Included depressed cases based on self-report checklists or psychiatric diagnostic criteria.
2 Only included depressed cases conform to psychiatric diagnostic criteria.
3 Cumulative assessment of cortisol across body fluids and across various time points.
4 Did not include data from one study including 1,018 depression patients and 515 controls that found a much smaller effect size (d = 0.12).
Overview of studies comparing biological dysregulations across melancholic and atypical depression
| Metabolic dysregulation | ||||
| Lamers | 379 | 201 | - | AD more MetS than MD |
| Seppala | 293 | 1391 | 2,388 | AD more MetS than C, no association with MD |
| Immuno-inflammatory dysregulation | ||||
| Anisman | 17 | 31 | 27 | No difference in IL-1b + IL-2 |
| Kaestner | 21 | 161 | 37 | AD higher IL-1b + IL-1RA than C + MD |
| Huang | 25 | 171 | 40 | MD higher IL-1b than AD no difference in IL-10 and TNF-α |
| Yoon | 70 | 35 | - | AD higher IL-2 and lower IL-4 than MD no differences in IL-6 + TNF-α |
| Lamers | 111 | 122 | 543 | AD higher IL-6 + CRP + TNF-α than MD + C |
| Karlovic | 32 | 23 | 18 | MD + AD higher IL-6 + CRP than C no difference in TNF-α |
| HPA-axis dysregulation | ||||
| Nelson | 662 | 6171 | - | MD more DST non-suppression than AD |
| Anisman | 17 | 31 | 27 | AD lower cortisol than C |
| Wong | 10 | - | 14 | MD higher cortisol than C |
| Kaestner | 21 | 161 | 37 | MD higher cortisol than AD + C |
| Lamers | 66 | 82 | 393 | MD higher cortisol than AD + C |
| Karlovic | 32 | 23 | 18 | MD higher cortisol than AD + C |
1 Atypical depression was assessed as the absence of melancholic depression (non-melancholic depression).
AD, Atypical depression; C, Healthy controls; CRP, C-reactive protein; DST, Dexamethasone suppression test; IL, Interleukin; MD, Melancholic depression; MetS, Metabolic syndrome; TNF, Tumor necrosis factor.