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Depression

Immunometabolic alterations in older adults with heightened depressive symptom trajectories: a network approach

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Pages 2229-2237 | Received 26 Oct 2022, Accepted 05 Jun 2023, Published online: 04 Jul 2023
 

Abstract

Objective: To analyse the patterns of relationships between depressive symptoms and immunometabolic markers across longitudinal depression status in older people. Methods: A sample of 3349 older adults (55.21% women; initial age: m = 58.44, sd = 5.21) from the English Longitudinal Study of Ageing was used. Participants were classified according to their longitudinal depression status: minimal depressive symptoms (n = 2736), depressive episode onset (n = 481), or chronic depression (n = 132). Network analysis was used to study the relationships between depression symptoms (CES-D 8 items), inflammatory (white blood cell, C-reactive protein, fibrinogen) and metabolic biomarkers (metabolic syndrome markers). Results: Network structure remained invariant across groups. The minimal symptom group had higher overall strength than both clinical groups (p < .01). Moreover, significant relationships between symptoms and markers were observed across group-specific networks. C-reactive protein and effort symptom were positively connected in the minimal symptom group but not in the other groups. Loneliness and diastolic blood pressure were positively associated only in the chronic depression group. Finally, metabolic markers were identified as central nodes in the clinical status networks. Conclusion: The network analysis constitutes a useful approach to disentangle pathophysiological relationships that may maintain mental disorders in old age.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author(s).

Additional information

Funding

The ELSA study is supported by the U.S. National Institute of Aging, the National Centre for Social Research, the University College London (UCL) and the Institute for Fiscal Studies. The authors gratefully acknowledge the UK Data Service and UCL who provided data for this paper. This study was supported by the Instituto de Salud Carlos III-FIS research grant PI20/00229, co-funded by the European Regional Development Fund (ERDF) “A Way to Build Europe”.

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