A new study
now published in the journal Scientific Reports has identified
three new subtypes of depression. The findings help explain why some types of
depression do not respond well to medication.
According to recent estimates, depression affects over 300 million people worldwide, and at least 16 million people in the United States.
Over 60 percent of U.S. individuals living with depression have
experienced severe impairment as a result, and up to 30 percent of
people living with depression do not find relief in existing treatments.
Selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitors (SSRIs) are the most commonly prescribed drugs for depression. They
work by boosting levels of the "happiness hormone" in the brain:
serotonin.
New research may help explain why SSRIs are
unable to fully tackle some types of depression. A team led by Prof. Kenji
Doya, of the Neural Computation Unit at the Okinawa Institute of Science and
Technology Graduate University (OIST) in Japan, has now identified three new
subtypes of depression.
Mapping the brain in depression
Prof. Doya explains the motivation for the recent study, saying,
"It has always been speculated that different types of depression exist,
and they influence the effectiveness of the drug. But there has been no
consensus."
To shed some light on this, the researchers examined the
clinical data of 134 study participants, half of whom doctors had recently
diagnosed with depression. Using questionnaires and blood tests, the scientists
collected information about the participants' life histories, mental health, sleep patterns, and
other potential causes of stress in their lives.
The scientists also used functional MRI scanners to study the
participants' brain activity, enabling them to map 78 brain regions and examine
the connections between these areas.
"The major challenge in this study," explains first
study author Tomoki Tokuda, who is a statistician at OIST, "was to develop
a statistical tool that could extract relevant information for clustering
similar subjects together."
Tokuda developed a new statistical method that allowed the
researchers to break down more than 3,000 measurable features into five data
clusters. The measurable features included the incidence of childhood trauma
and the initial severity of the depressive episode.
Drug-resistant type of depression found
Of those five data clusters, three corresponded with different
subtypes of depression. The brain imaging revealed that the functional
connectivity of different brain areas that were connected to the angular gyrus
predicted whether SSRIs effectively treated depression.
The angular gyrus is a brain region involved in processing
language, numbers, spatial cognition, and attention.
The study found that one of the subtypes
identified, which did not respond to SSRIs, correlated with high functional
connectivity as well as with childhood trauma.
The other two subtypes of depression, which responded well to
drugs, were characterized by low brain connectivity and the absence of
childhood trauma.
These findings may help physicians predict how effective
depression treatment will be based on functional brain connectivity and the
incidence of childhood trauma, explain the authors.
"This is the first study to identify depression subtypes
from life history and MRI data," says Prof. Doya.
"It provides scientists studying neurobiological aspects of
depression a promising direction in which to pursue their research," adds
the scientist.
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