4.7 Article

Obesity and atypical depression symptoms: findings from Mendelian randomization in two European cohorts

期刊

TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY
卷 11, 期 1, 页码 -

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SPRINGERNATURE
DOI: 10.1038/s41398-021-01236-7

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资金

  1. GlaxoSmithKline
  2. Faculty of Biology and Medicine of Lausanne
  3. Swiss National Science Foundation [3200B0-105993, 3200B0-118308, 33CSCO-122661, 33CS30-139468, 33CS30-148401, 33CS30_177535/1]
  4. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research [10000-1002]
  5. Center for Medical Systems Biology (CSMB, NVVO Genomics)
  6. MagW/ZonMW [904-61-090, 985-10-002, 912-10-020, 904-61-193,480-04-004, 463-06-001, 451-04-034, 400-05-717 Addiction-31 160008, Middelgroot-91 1-09-032, Spinozapremie 56-464-14192]
  7. Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI-NL)
  8. VU University's Institutes for Health and Care Research (EMGO+)
  9. Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam, University Medical Center Groningen
  10. Leiden University Medical Center
  11. National Institutes of Health (NIH) [ROI D0042157-01A, MH081802, 1 RC2 Ml-1089951, IRC2 MH089995, IRC2 Ml-1089951, IRC2 Ml-1089995]
  12. Genetic Association Information Network (GAIN) of the Foundation for the National Institutes of Health
  13. BiG Grid, the Dutch e-Science Grid - NWO
  14. Netherlands Organization for Scientific Research (NWO)
  15. NBlC/BioAssisURK [2008.024]
  16. Biobanking and Biomolecular Resources Research Infrastructure (BBMRI-NL) [184.021.007]
  17. VU University's Institute for Health and Care Research (EMGO+)
  18. Neuroscience Campus Amsterdam (NCA)
  19. European Science Foundation [ESF EU/QLRT-2001-01254]
  20. European Community's Seventh Framework Program (FP7/2007-2013)
  21. ENGAGE [HEALTH-F4-2007-201413]
  22. European Science Council (ERC) [230374]
  23. Rutgers University Cell and DNA Repository [NIMH U24 MH068457-06]
  24. Avera Institute, Sioux Falls, South Dakota (USA)
  25. NWO

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Studies utilizing a Mendelian Randomization approach have shown potential causal links between higher BMI and an increase in appetite symptom in depressed individuals, but no causal effects on the atypical subtype or other symptoms were found. Further research is needed to understand the complex relationships between obesity and specific symptoms of depression.
Studies considering the causal role of body mass index (BMI) for the predisposition of major depressive disorder (MDD) based on a Mendelian Randomization (MR) approach have shown contradictory results. These inconsistent findings may be attributable to the heterogeneity of MDD; in fact, several studies have documented associations between BMI and mainly the atypical subtype of MDD. Using a MR approach, we investigated the potential causal role of obesity in both the atypical subtype and its five specific symptoms assessed according to the Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM), in two large European cohorts, CoLaus|PsyCoLaus (n=3350, 1461 cases and 1889 controls) and NESDA|NTR (n=4139, 1182 cases and 2957 controls). We first tested general obesity measured by BMI and then the body fat distribution measured by waist-to-hip ratio (WHR). Results suggested that BMI is potentially causally related to the symptom increase in appetite, for which inverse variance weighted, simple median and weighted median MR regression estimated slopes were 0.68 (SE=0.23, p=0.004), 0.77 (SE=0.37, p=0.036), and 1.11 (SE=0.39, p=0.004). No causal effect of BMI or WHR was found on the risk of the atypical subtype or for any of the other atypical symptoms. Our findings show that higher obesity is likely causal for the specific symptom of increase in appetite in depressed participants and reiterate the need to study depression at the granular level of its symptoms to further elucidate potential causal relationships and gain additional insight into its biological underpinnings.

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