4.7 Article

Is subthreshold depression in adolescence clinically relevant?

Journal

JOURNAL OF AFFECTIVE DISORDERS
Volume 309, Issue -, Pages 123-130

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.jad.2022.04.067

Keywords

Subthreshold depression; Major depressive disorder; Adolescence; Mood

Funding

  1. NSERC
  2. Queen's University
  3. Fonds de Recherche du Quebec-Sante

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Subthreshold depression and major depressive disorder in adolescents share similarities in several aspects, including higher prevalence, functional impairment, comorbidity, genetic predisposition, and treatment response. However, the definition of subthreshold depression varies across studies, and adolescent-specific data are limited.
Background: Subthreshold depression is highly prevalent in adolescence, but compared to major depressive disorder, the clinical impact is under-researched. The aim of this review was to compare subthreshold depression and major depressive disorder in adolescents by reviewing available literature on epidemiology, risk factors, illness trajectories, brain anatomy and function, genetics, and treatment response.Methods: We conducted a scoping review of papers on subthreshold depression and major depressive disorder in adolescence published in English. Studies in adults were included when research in adolescence was not available.Results: We found that individuals with subthreshold depression were similar to individuals with major depressive disorder in several regards, including female/male ratio, onset, functional impairment, comorbidity, health care utilization, suicidal ideation, genetic predisposition, brain alterations, and treatment response. Further, subthreshold depression was about two times more common than major depressive disorder. Limitations: The definition of subthreshold depression is highly variable across studies. Adolescent-specific data are limited in the areas of neurobiology and treatment.Conclusions: The findings of the current review support the idea that subthreshold depression is of clinical importance and provide evidence for a spectrum, versus categorical model, for depressive symptomatology. Given the frequency of subthreshold depression escalating to major depressive disorder, a greater recognition and awareness of the significance of subthreshold depression in research, clinical practice and policy-making may facilitate the development and application of early prevention and intervention.

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