| Literature DB >> 35332134 |
Eline T Luning Prak1,2, Thomas Brooks3,4, Walid Makhoul3, Joanne C Beer5, Ling Zhao1,2, Tommaso Girelli3, Carsten Skarke4,6, Yvette I Sheline7,8.
Abstract
Depression is a common and debilitating disorder in the elderly. Late-life depression (LLD) has been associated with inflammation and elevated levels of proinflammatory cytokines including interleukin (IL)-1β, tumor necrosis factor-alpha, and IL-6, but often depressed individuals have comorbid medical conditions that are associated with immune dysregulation. To determine whether depression has an association with inflammation independent of medical illness, 1120 adults were screened to identify individuals who had clinically significant depression but not medical conditions associated with systemic inflammation. In total, 66 patients with LLD screened to exclude medical conditions associated with inflammation were studied in detail along with 26 age-matched controls (HC). At baseline, circulating cytokines were low and similar in LLD and HC individuals. Furthermore, cytokines did not change significantly after treatment with either an antidepressant (escitalopram 20 mg/day) or an antidepressant plus a COX-2 inhibitor or placebo, even though depression scores improved in the non-placebo treatment arms. An analysis of cerebrospinal fluid in a subset of individuals for IL-1β using an ultrasensitive digital enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay revealed low levels in both LLD and HC at baseline. Our results indicate that depression by itself does not result in systemic or intrathecal elevations in cytokines and that celecoxib does not appear to have an adjunctive antidepressant role in older patients who do not have medical reasons for having inflammation. The negative finding for increased inflammation and the lack of a treatment effect for celecoxib in this carefully screened depressed population taken together with multiple positive results for inflammation in previous studies that did not screen out physical illness support a precision medicine approach to the treatment of depression that takes the medical causes for inflammation into account.Entities:
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Year: 2022 PMID: 35332134 PMCID: PMC8948274 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-022-01883-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222
Fig. 1Overview of study participant groups, screening, and cohorts.
a 1120 individuals were screened online. Of those, 178 were excluded for medical reasons (red chart and see Table S1 for further details) and 823 were excluded for miscellaneous reasons (black chart and see Table S1 for further details). The remaining 119 individuals passed the screen (green). Of those, additional individuals withdrew or were excluded upon further review (see Table S2 for details). b Numbers of individuals for screening, baseline, and randomization visits as well as the final subject numbers. Arrows indicate the number of individuals who withdrew or were excluded at various stages of the study. MDD = major depressive disorder. Of the n = 49 who completed the study *n = have complete biosample data sets. Of these 40, n = 18 escitalopram, n = 12 escitalopram + celecoxib, n = 10 placebo.
Inclusion and exclusion criteria.
| Inclusion criteria | Visit | Assessments |
|---|---|---|
| Age 50–80, right-handed male or female, any race | Screening survey | Screening survey |
| Absence of clinical dementia | In-person visit | Clinical Dementia Rating Scale (CDRS) |
| English speaking | Screening Survey | Screening survey |
| Blood pressure not exceeding 150/90 mmHg, treated, or untreated | In-person visit | Vitals and electrocardiogram (EKG) |
| Normal result on liver function test | In-person visit | Blood draw |
| No history of ulcer disease or GI bleeding | Both | Screening survey Medical history |
| Weight >110 pounds | Both | Screening survey vitals |
| Willing to take antidepressant medication/willing to switch antidepressant medication | Screening survey | Screening survey |
| DSM-IV criteria for MDD§ | In-person visit | Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-V (SCID) Overview Montgomery Asberg Depression Rating Scale (MADRS) Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (HDRS) Depression History |
| Exclusion criteria | ||
| Known history of relevant severe drug allergy or hypersensitivity | In-person visit | Medical history |
| Does not speak English | Screening survey | Screening survey |
| Cannot give informed consent | In-person visit | Informed consent process |
| MRI contraindications (e.g., foreign metallic implants, pacemaker, claustrophobia) | Screening Survey | Screening survey |
| BMI > 30 | Screening Survey | Screening survey |
| Known primary neurological disorders, such as Parkinson’s disease, Alzheimer’s disease, traumatic brain injury, cognitive impairment, or dementia | Screening Survey | CDRS medical history |
| Known inflammatory disease (such as systemic lupus erythematosis, known autoimmune diseases, such as multiple sclerosis, rheumatoid arthritis, Graves’ disease, Hashimoto’s disease; Screen + for rheumatoid factor, anti-nuclear antibody, HIV, Hepatitis B or Hepatitis C) | Both | Cumulative Illness Rating Scale (CIRS) Medical History Blood Draw |
| Clinical Dementia Rating Scale score >0 | In-person visit | CDRS |
| Diagnosis of a chronic psychiatric illness other than MDD | In-person visit | SCID overview |
| Significant handicaps (e.g., uncorrected hearing or visual impairment, mental retardation) that would interfere with testing | In-person visit | Montreal Cognitive Assessment (MoCA) The 36-Item Short Form Health Survey SF (36) Disability Scale |
| Bleeding diathesis | In-person visit | Medical history blood draw CIRS |
| Severe Medical problem, which in the opinion of the investigator would pose a safety risk to the subject | In-person visit | Medical history CIRS |
| Clinically significant cardiovascular disease within the last 6 months (see methods) | In-person visit | Blood draw vitals Framingham Scale EKG |
| Clinically significant abnormalities on EKG. Primary AV block or right bundle branch block were not necessarily exclusionary | In-person visit | EKG |
| Current diagnosis of cancer | Both | Screening survey Medical history |
| Use of an investigational medicine within the past 30 days | In-person visit | Medical history |
| Use of Coumadin, Warfarin within the past 2 months | In-person visit | Medical history |
| Current treatment with psychotropic drugs or drugs that affect the CNS such as beta-blockers, mood stabilizers, antipsychotics, steroids, or nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory medications. No subjects were included in the study unless they had been off all psychotropics for at least 3 weeks, except in the case of fluoxetine, where 5 weeks off treatment was required | In-person visit | Medical history |
| Current alcohol or substance abuse disorder, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, bipolar disorder, or current OCD | Both | SCID overview DIGS summary |
| History of ulcer disease, Crohn’s disease, GI bleed, or anemia | Both | Screening survey Medical history |
| Renal insufficiency | In-person visit | Blood draw |
| Any other factor that in the investigator’s judgment may affect patient safety or compliance (e.g., travel distance >100 miles from this facility) | Both | |
| Active suicidality or current suicidal risk as determined by the investigator§ | In-person visit | SCID overview MADRS HDRS |
§Indicates criteria unique to depressed participants.
Demographics of study cohorts.
| Variables | Healthy controls | Participants with MDD | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ( | Escitalopram + celecoxib ( | Escitalopram ( | Placebo ( | ||
| Mean age (years) | 65.2 | 57.4 | 62.1 | 61.6 | 0.86 |
| SD age | 10.3 | 6.4 | 9.8 | 8.0 | |
| Gender (male/female) | (13/11) | (6/8) | (13/11) | (8/7) | 0.95 |
| Race (white/black) | (16/8) | (8/6) | (13/11) | (8/7) | 0.38 |
| BMI | 25.3 ± 2.8 | 26.64 ± 3.8 | 0.14 | ||
| Married/long-term relationship | 48% | 29% | 27% | 21% | |
| Divorced/separated | 30% | 38% | 53% | 36% | |
| Never married | 22% | 33% | 20% | 43% | |
| Post-graduate & professional degree | 48% | 21% | 37% | 20% | |
| Bachelor’s degree | 23% | 29% | 8% | 20% | |
| Associate degree | 0% | 14% | 17% | 47% | |
| Some college & high school | 29% | 35% | 38% | 13% | |
| Full time | 43% | 43% | 18% | 13% | |
| Part time | 14% | 29% | 32% | 47% | |
| Retired | 29% | 7% | 18% | 20% | |
| Unemployed | 9% | 7% | 14% | 13% | |
| Disability | 5% | 14% | 18% | 21% | |
| $50,000 and above | 66% | 36% | 20% | 21% | |
| $30–50,000 | 10% | 14% | 25% | 7% | |
| $0–30,000 | 24% | 60% | 55% | 72% | |
*Significance of differences between MDD and HC cohorts were compared using t-tests for age and BMI and using the Freeman-Halton method for the others.
Fig. 2Baseline circulating cytokine profiles in individuals with major depressive disorder (MDD) vs. healthy controls (HC).
a Heat map of cytokine profiles. Rows show the data for each individual (subject number, disease grouping), columns show each analyte. Interpolated assay values (picogram/milliliter; pg/mL) are heat mapped, with black denoting the lowest values. EGF epidermal growth factor, G-CSF granulocyte colony-stimulating factor, GM-CSF granulocyte-macrophage colony-stimulating factor, IFN interferon, IL interleukin, IP-10 interferon-gamma induced protein 10 (CXCL10); MCP1 monocyte chemoattractant protein 1, MIP-1α macrophage inflammatory protein 1a (CCL3), MIP-1β macrophage inflammatory protein 1b (CCL4), TNF tumor necrosis factor, VEGF vascular endothelial growth factor. MDD major depressive disorder, HC healthy control. b Comparison of selected cytokine levels in MDD (blue) vs. HC (orange). The black horizontal line denotes median values for each analyte and cohort. The sample size is n = 51 MDD and n = 26 HC. No differences were significant by a Wilcoxon rank-sum test in any of the 29 analytes (all comparisons are shown in Fig. S1, p > 0.1).
Fig. 3Temporal analysis of depression scores, CSF IL-1β levels, and integrated biomarkers.
a MADRS scores at baseline and final visit. MDD patients in all groups saw significant improvement to MADRS scores (Wilcoxon signed-rank test, escitalopram p < 0.001 in n = 23, escitalopram and celecoxib p = 0.003 in n = 12, and placebo p = 0.034 in n = 12, healthy controls n = 23). In addition, the patients receiving escitalopram (either with or without celecoxib) saw a significant improvement over patients receiving placebo (ANCOVA p = 0.030, effect size = −6.34 (SE = 2.8) points, n = 35 with escitalopram, n = 12 placebo). b Integrated inflammatory biomarker signature at baseline compared with a final visit in the treatment and control cohorts. The scores for the top principal component were computed from inflammatory biomarker concentrations measured at T1, and then scores from T2 measurements were computed by projection according to T1 loadings. No significant changes were observed in any groups (Wilcoxon signed-rank test p > 0.1 for all treatments; n = 18 control, n = 10 placebo, n = 18 escitalopram (ESC), n = 12 ESC + celecoxib) and individuals’ scores were highly consistent. T1 = start of therapy; T2 = after 8 weeks of therapy. c IL-1β levels are low in CSF and do not change with treatment for depression. IL-1β levels in the CSF were measured by dELISA in 5 HC (orange) and 19 individuals with MDD (blue). The median level is N.S. (p = 0.688, Wilcoxon rank-sum test); CSF IL-1β levels do not change following treatment with ESC (20 mg/day × 8 weeks, p = 0.638, Wilcoxon signed-rank test); Lines interconnect samples from the same patient drawn at T1 and T2. CSF IL-1β levels do not change following treatment with placebo (P, p = 0.461, Wilcoxon signed-rank test); CSF cerebrospinal fluid, HC healthy control, MDD major depressive disorder, ESC escitalopram, P = placebo.