| Literature DB >> 29296279 |
Thalia M Sparling1, Robin C Nesbitt1, Nicholas Henschke1, Sabine Gabrysch1.
Abstract
Pregnancy and lactation deplete nutrients essential to the neurotransmission system. This may be one reason for the increased risk of depression during the perinatal period. The objective of the present review was to systematically review the literature and summarise evidence on whether blood nutrient levels influence the risk of perinatal depression. PubMed, EMBASE and CINAHL databases were searched for studies of any design. A total of twenty-four articles of different designs were included, representing 14 262 subjects. We extracted data on study population, depression prevalence, nutrients examined, deficiency prevalence, timing of assessment, reporting, analysis strategy and adjustment factors. In all, fourteen studies found associations of perinatal depression with lower levels of folate, vitamin D, Fe, Se, Zn, and fats and fatty acids, while two studies found associations between perinatal depression and higher nutrient levels, and eight studies found no evidence of an association. Only ten studies had low risk of bias. Given the methodological limitations and heterogeneity of study approaches and results, the evidence for a causal link between nutritional biomarkers and perinatal depression is still inconclusive. High-quality studies in deficient populations are needed.Entities:
Keywords: CES-D, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; EPDS, Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale; LMIC, low-income and middle-income countries; Maternal health; Nutrients; Nutritional biomarkers; Perinatal depression; RCT, randomised controlled trial
Year: 2017 PMID: 29296279 PMCID: PMC5738654 DOI: 10.1017/jns.2017.58
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Nutr Sci ISSN: 2048-6790
Fig. 1.Search strategy. MeSH, medical subject headings; ti/ab, title or abstract.
Summary of studies evaluating associations between nutrients and perinatal depression*†‡§||
| Study characteristics | Exposure | Outcome | Results | |||||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| First author (year) | Country (cohort) | Study design | Depression prevalence | Nutritional deficiency | Nutrients analysed | Exposure definition | Time assessed | Tool; cut-point | Time assessed | Adj. model | Protective associations | |
| B vitamins | ||||||||||||
| Blunden (2012)( | UK (Southampton Women's Survey) | 2856 | Cohort | 32 % | 0·3 % | Folate | Mean nutrient levels | 1st trimester | EPDS; 13 | PP: 6 months, 1 year | No | None |
| Chong (2014)( | Singapore | 709 | Cohort | 7 % preg, 10 % PP | Not reported | Folate and vitamin B12 | Mean nutrient levels, quartiles of nutrient levels | 3rd trimester | EPDS; 15 preg, 13 PP | 3rd trimester, PP: 3 months | Yes | High |
| Vitamin D | ||||||||||||
| Accortt (2016)( | USA (DOMInO trial) | 91 | Cohort | 12 % | 85 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Linear nutrient levels | 1st trimester | EPDS, continuous | PP: 4–6 weeks | Yes | None (high |
| Brandenbarg (2012)( | Netherlands (Amsterdam Born Children and Their Development (ABCD) study) | 4101 | Cohort | 28 % | 44 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Deficient, insufficient, sufficient, and normal | 1st trimester | CES-D; 16 | 2nd trimester | Yes | Normal and sufficient |
| Cassidy-Bushrow (2012)( | USA (DOMInO trial) | 178 | Cohort | 42 % | 83 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Linear nutrient levels | 1st trimester | CES-D; 16 | 2nd trimester | Yes | High |
| Fu (2015)( | China | 213 | Cohort | 12 % | 83 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Deficient, insufficient and normal | PP: 48 h | EPDS; 12 | PP: 3 months | Yes | High |
| Gould (2015)( | Australia | 1040 | Cohort (in PUFA RCT) | 10 % | 42 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Three nutrient levels | PP: 48 h | EPDS; 12 | PP: 6 weeks, 6 months | Yes | None (high |
| Gur (2014)( | Turkey | 189 | Cohort | 24 % at 6 months | 40 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Normal, mild deficiency and severe deficiency; means; linear | 2nd trimester | EPDS; 12 | PP: 1 week, 6 weeks, 6 months | No | High |
| Murphy (2010)( | USA | 97 | Cohort | 12 % | 58 % ≤32 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Insufficient | PP: each month for 1–7 months | EPDS; 9 | PP: each month for 1–7 months | Yes | Sufficient |
| Robinson (2014)( | Australia (Raine: Western Australian Pregnancy Cohort Study) | 796 | Cohort | 19 % | 24 % <19 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Quartiles of nutrient levels | 2nd trimester | Shortened EPDS; 6 | PP: 3 d | Yes | High |
| Huang (2014)( | USA | 498 | Cross-section | 12 % | 4 % ≤20 ng/ml | Vitamin D | Quartiles and linear trend of nutrient levels | 2nd trimester | DASS-21, PHQ-9; linear | 2nd trimester | Yes | None |
| Nielsen (2013)( | Denmark (Danish National Birth Cohort) | 1480 | Case–control | N/A | Not reported | Vitamin D | Six nutrient levels | 3rd trimester | Prescription filled without admission | Within 1 year | Yes | Normal |
| Fe and B vitamins | ||||||||||||
| Lukose (2014)( | India | 365 | Cross-section (baseline of RCT) | 33 % | 30 % anaemic | Hb, complete blood count, erythrocyte DW, vitamin B12, Hcy, MMA, folate | Low | 1st trimester | K-10; 6 | 1st trimester | Yes | Anaemia |
| Watanabe (2010)( | Japan | 86 | Cross-section | 62 % | Not reported | Folate, Hcy, total protein, albumin, Fe, Hb, Hct | Mean nutrient levels, low | 1st trimester | CES-D; 16 | 1st trimester | Yes | None |
| Fe | ||||||||||||
| Albacar (2011)( | Spain | 729 | Cohort | 9 % major depression | Fe depletion: 25 %, Fe deficiency: 14 % | Fer, transferrin, free TfS, CRP | Fe depletion, marginal Fe depletion, Fe deficiency | PP: 48 h | SCID-CV | 48 h, 8 weeks, 32 weeks | Yes | Ferritin levels above Fe deficiency and Fe depletion |
| Aubuchon-Endsley (2012)( | USA | 82 | Cross-section | Not reported | No deficiency | Hb, sTfR, Fer, AGP | Mean nutrient levels | PP: 3 months | SCL-90-R; mean and | PP: 3 months | No | None |
| Bae (2010)( | Korea | 114 | Cross-section | 43 % | No anaemia | Leucocytes, erythrocytes, Hb, Hct, MCV, MCH, MCHC, erythrocyte DW, platelets, PDW, MPV | Mean nutrient levels. No cut-offs | Pregnancy | BDI; 10 | Pregnancy | No | None |
| Se | ||||||||||||
| Mokhber (2011)( | Iran | 166 | RCT | Not reported | Not reported | Se | Randomised; supplementation during pregnancy | N/A | EPDS; mean difference | PP: 0–8 weeks | N/A | Se supplementation |
| Zn and Mg | ||||||||||||
| Wójcik (2006)( | Poland | 66 | Cohort (all supplement) | 3 d PP: 42 %, 30 d PP: 29 % | Not reported | Zn and Mg | Mean nutrient levels | PP: 3 d, 30 d | EPDS; 10 | PP: 3 d, 30 d | No | High |
| Fats and fatty acids | ||||||||||||
| Markhus (2013)( | Norway | 43 | Cohort | 7 % | 28 % ≤5·1 on omega-3 index | DPA, DHA, omega-3 index, | Mean nutrient levels and quartiles of nutrients | 3rd trimester | EPDS; 10 or continuous | PP: 3 months, 6 months, 12 months | No | High |
| Pinto (2017)( | Brazil (Mental Health and Nutritional Status During Pregnancy and Postpartum) | 172 | Cohort | 23 % (average of three trimesters) | Not reported | ALA, EPA, DPA, DHA, LA, AA, γ-LA, EDA, ETE, total | Mean nutrient levels. No cut-offs | 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimesters | EPDS; 11 | 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimesters | Yes | High |
| Teofilo (2014)( | Brazil (Mental Health and Nutritional Status During Pregnancy and Postpartum) | 238 | Cohort | 22 % (2nd and 3rd trimesters) | Not reported | TAG, total cholesterol, LDL, HDL | Mean nutrient levels. No cut-offs | 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimesters | EPDS; 11 | 1st, 2nd and 3rd trimesters | Yes | High |
| Rees (2009)( | Australia | 38 | Case–control | N/A | Not reported | High | 3rd trimester | EPDS; 13, SCID-CV | 3rd trimester | Yes | High | |
| All nutrients | ||||||||||||
| Bodnar (2012)( | USA (Antidepressant Use During Pregnancy (ADUP) Study) | 135 | Cohort | 22 % | ‘Population was well-nourished’ | AA, EPA, DHA, folate, Hcy, vitamin C, vitamin D, vitamin A and carotenoids, vitamin E, Fer and sTfR | Tertiles of factors identified with PCA: EFA, micronutrients, carotenoids | 1st or 2nd trimester | SCID-CV | 2nd or 3rd trimester | Yes | None |
* Statistical terms: Adj. model, statistical analysis adjusted for potential confounding factors; N/A, not applicable; PCA, principal components analysis; RCT, randomised control trial.
† Depression terms: BDI, Beck Depression Inventory; CES-D, Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale; DASS-21, Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Scales; EPDS, Edinburgh Postpartum Depression Scale; K-10, Kessler Depression Scale; PHQ-9, Patient Health Questionnaire Depression Module; PP, postpartum; preg, pregnancy; SCID-CV, Structured Clinical Interview; SCL-90-R, Symptom Checklist-90-Revised.
‡ Fe and blood terms: AGP, inflammatory marker 1-acid glycoprotein; CRP, inflammatory marker C-reactive protein; DW, distribution width; Fer, ferritin; Hct, haematocrit; MCH, mean corpuscular Hb; MCHC, mean corpuscular Hb concentration; MCV, mean corpuscular volume; MPV, mean platelet volume; PDW, platelet distribution width; sTfR, soluble transferrin receptors; TfS, free Fe and transferrin saturation.
§ Vitamins and minerals: A, retinol; B12, cobalamin; C, ascorbic acid; D, serum 25-hydroxyvitamin D; EFA, essential fatty acids; Hcy, homocysteine; MMA, methylmalonic acid.
ǁ Fatty acid terms: AA, arachidonic acid; ALA, α-linolenic acid; EDA, eicosadienoic acid; ETE, eicosatrienoic acid; HUFA, highly unsaturated fatty acids; LA, linolenic acid.
Fig. 2.Flowchart for inclusion of studies.
Fig. 3.Risk of bias assessment results for cross-sectional studies and case–control studies. * Case–control studies; +, low risk of bias; ?, unclear risk of bias; –, high risk of bias.
Fig. 4.Risk of bias assessment results for cohort studies. +, Low risk of bias; ?, unclear risk of bias; –, high risk of bias.
Methodological recommendations for future studies
| Recommendations on design and methods for future studies |
| 1. Choose study populations with substantial nutrient deficiencies |
| 2. Power studies sufficiently, considering prevalences of nutrient deficiencies and perinatal depression in the study area |
| 3. Measure nutrient concentrations in blood or urine, and assess dietary intake to have both precise biochemical measures and to capture a range of nutrients and complex nutrient synergies |
| 4. Measure both depression and nutrients at several time points to be able to assess magnitude of change and determine the direction of a possible causal relationship |
| 5. Measure depression with a sufficient time gap after the nutritional assessment in line with the expected onset of depression after a nutritional deficiency |
| 6. Standardise timing of measurements as nutrient concentrations are likely to fluctuate and generally diminish throughout pregnancy |
| 7. Establish a personal and family history of depression and adjust for this variable as a potential confounder |