Increase in Interleukin-1β in Late-Life Depression: American Journal Of Psychiatry · February 2005
Increase in Interleukin-1β in Late-Life Depression: American Journal Of Psychiatry · February 2005
Increase in Interleukin-1β in Late-Life Depression: American Journal Of Psychiatry · February 2005
discussions, stats, and author profiles for this publication at: http://www.researchgate.net/publication/8106173
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6 AUTHORS, INCLUDING:
Christopher M Morris
Newcastle University
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Brief Report
Method
We recruited three groups of subjects over 60 years old: 1) subjects who had DSM-IV-diagnosed major depression and who
scored 20 on the Montgomery-sberg Depression Rating Scale
(5); 2) subjects who had experienced at least one previous episode
of DSM-IV major depression, who scored 819 on the Montgomery-sberg Depression Rating Scale, and who currently did not
meet full criteria for major depression; and 3) comparison subjects with no current or past psychiatric illness who scored <8 on
the Montgomery-sberg Depression Rating Scale.
All subjects gave written informed consent and were recruited
from outpatient and inpatient psychiatric facilities. Comparison
subjects were recruited from spouses and friends of depressed
subjects. None of the study subjects had any clinical evidence of
dementia, other neurological disorders, or conditions associated
with inflammation such as rheumatoid arthritis, and no study
subjects were taking oral steroids. Cognition was assessed with
the Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) and the cognitive
section of the Cambridge Examination for Mental Disorders of
the Elderly (6). Subjects scoring less than the standard cutoffs for
global cognitive impairment on these measures (24 and 80, respectively) were excluded.
Am J Psychiatry 162:1, January 2005
Results
Nineteen subjects with major depression, 20 with subsyndromal depression, and 21 healthy comparison subjects met entry criteria (Table 1). Groups did not differ in
age or sex; as expected, however, the depressed groups
had greater cognitive impairment. There were differences in IL-1 across the groups, and analysis revealed
this to be attributable to the significantly greater level of
IL-1 (greater by 171%) in subjects with major depreshttp://ajp.psychiatryonline.org
175
BRIEF REPORTS
TABLE 1. Comparison of Interleukin 1 in Subjects With Late-Life Major Depression, Subjects With Subsyndromal Depression, and Healthy Comparison Subjects
No Depression
(N=21)
Mean
SD
Characteristic
Age (years)
74.9
7.0
Major Depression
(N=19)
Mean
SD
76.4
N
Sex
Male
Female
7.3
75.1
9
12
Subsyndromal Depression
(N=20)
Mean
SD
5.7
6
13
F
0.29
Analysisa
df
2, 57
p
<0.75
df
1.38
df
p
<0.51
10
10
Mean
SD
Mean
SD
Mean
SD
28.7
1.0
26.8
2.5
26.3
2.1
8.21
2, 56
0.001
95.0
3.8
88.0
7.3
88.6
6.1
310.46
2, 56
<0.001
1.1
2.8
3.9
1.0
1.5
2.5
3.3
1.2
30.3
20.9
5.5
2.7
6.2
4.2
3.3
2.5
12.0
15.4
3.8
1.8
5.3
7.9
2.9
1.8
190.93
43.57
2.24
4.53
2, 57
2, 49
2, 55
2, 57
<0.001
<0.001
<0.12
<0.02
176
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Discussion
As hypothesized, we found higher levels of IL-1 in subjects with current major depression and that IL-1 levels
strongly correlated with current depression severity. The
correlation suggests that the finding may be state related,
and this suggestion is supported by the fact that IL-1 levels were correlated with the duration of the current depressive episode but not with the lifetime duration of
depression.
To our knowledge, this is the first report of IL-1 levels in
late-life depression, and our findings are consistent with
those of Penninx et al. (3), who reported increases in the
cytokines IL-6 and TNF- in community subjects with latelife depression. Penninx et al. reported an association of IL6 with male gender, but we found no such relationship with
IL-1. Our findings are also consistent with earlier reports
of elevations of IL-1 in middle-aged depressed adults (1,
9); a correlation with current depression severity was also
noted in another study (2). In our examination of the association between severity of illness and duration of current
depressive episode, like Anisman et al. (2), we found a
strong relationship, unlike the relationship between lifetime duration of depression and severity of illness.
This study was limited by its cross-sectional design and
the absence of other important neurobiological measures
in depression such as alterations in the hypothalamic-pituitary-adrenal (HPA) axis. It complements the report of Penninx et al. by examining hospital-derived psychiatry subjects and confirming higher levels of another cytokine. A
Am J Psychiatry 162:1, January 2005
BRIEF REPORTS
References
1. Maes M, Bosmans E, Meltzer HY, Scharpe S, Suy E: Interleukin1 beta: a putative mediator of HPA axis hyperactivity in major
depression? Am J Psychiatry 1993; 150:11891193
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