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引用次数: 0
摘要
单极抑郁症通常被认为是一种精神障碍,但它经常与各种主要疾病共存。本研究采用疾病关联研究(disease - wide Association study, DWAS)方法绘制单极抑郁症周围的疾病连续图,分析了来自392,423人的注册队列数据,其中包括43,280例诊断为单极抑郁症的病例。抑郁症与包括精神和身体疾病在内的多器官系统合并症之间存在显著关联。接下来,时间分析将这些合并症根据其与抑郁症的发病分为短期(1年)、中期(5年)和长期(15年),发现与精神分裂症、焦虑症、创伤后应激障碍(PTSD)、哮喘、甲状腺功能减退、2型糖尿病、心律失常和癌症等合并症在时间上的一致关联。这些发现强调了抑郁症在更广泛的疾病连续网络中的相互联系的本质。在这一系统框架内认识到抑郁症有助于采用针对个体合并症的个性化医疗策略,使治疗能够针对共同的致病机制,同时解决抑郁症及其相关合并症。
Disease-wide association study uncovers disease continuum network of unipolar depression.
Unipolar depression is typically regarded as a psychiatric disorder, yet it frequently coexists with various major diseases. This study employs a Disease-Wide Association Study (DWAS) approach to map the disease continuum surrounding unipolar depression, analyzing data from a registry cohort of 392,423 individuals, including 43,280 diagnosed cases of unipolar depression. Significant associations were identified between depression and comorbidities across multiple organ systems, including both mental and physical disorders. Next, temporal analysis categorized these comorbidities based on their onset relative to depression into short-term (1-year), mid-term (5-year), and long-term (15-year) periods, discovering temporal consistent associations with comorbidities such as schizophrenia, anxiety disorders, post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), asthma, hypothyroidism, type 2 diabetes, cardiac arrhythmias, and cancer. These findings highlight the interconnected nature of depression within a broader disease continuum network. Recognizing depression within this systemic framework supports the adoption of personalized medicine strategies tailored to individual comorbidity profiles, enabling therapeutic targeting of shared pathogenic mechanisms that concurrently address both depression and its associated comorbidities.
期刊介绍:
European Neuropsychopharmacology is the official publication of the European College of Neuropsychopharmacology (ECNP). In accordance with the mission of the College, the journal focuses on clinical and basic science contributions that advance our understanding of brain function and human behaviour and enable translation into improved treatments and enhanced public health impact in psychiatry. Recent years have been characterized by exciting advances in basic knowledge and available experimental techniques in neuroscience and genomics. However, clinical translation of these findings has not been as rapid. The journal aims to narrow this gap by promoting findings that are expected to have a major impact on both our understanding of the biological bases of mental disorders and the development and improvement of treatments, ideally paving the way for prevention and recovery.