Who Gets Depressed Under Intense Stress? Genetic Risk Prediction Shows Promise

Research in first-year medical residents suggests the predictive power of a tool based on multiple gene variants linked to depression.

2:37 PM

Author | Kara Gavin

Residents standing near one another with clouds over some

Depression doesn't come from one gene, one life event, or one personality trait. That's what makes it so hard to predict, prevent or treat effectively.

But new research suggests the power of a tool that uses a range of genetic information to predict a person's chance of developing depression when they're under intense stress. The findings might help lead to a better understanding of the pathways that lead to depression.

While the tool is far from ready for common use on individuals, it does suggest the potential to personalize depression prevention, and identification of those who might be most vulnerable to stress or most resilient.

The study was done in a population of more than 5,200 people in the most stressful year of training for a medical career, called the intern year of residency. The potential depression tool is described in a new paper in Nature Human Behaviour by a team from the University of Michigan.

A score based on many genetic factors

The team used a genetic risk-assessment tool called polygenic risk score. They constructed a polygenic risk score for major depressive disorder, or MDD-PRS, from widely available consortium and biobank data on the known associations between a person's risk of depression, and variations throughout a person's genome.

While genetics and stress are known to play a role in depression risk and onset, the new research helps reveal the way these factors interact.

The interns who had higher-than-average MDD-PRS scores were slightly more likely to be among the 3% of interns who showed signs of depression before their intern year started. But by the end of the year, these high PRS subjects were much more likely to be among the 33% of interns who had developed depression.

SEE ALSO: Depression in First-Year Doctors Depends on Where They Train

On the other hand, the group with the lowest MDD-PRS scores were far less likely to show signs of depression throughout their intern year, suggesting that the scoring system could be used to identify those most likely to be resilient despite intense stress.

Interns as a model of depression and stress

The research team tested the predictive power of MDD-PRS on young doctors taking part in the Intern Health Study, which is led by Srijan Sen, M.D., Ph.D., the senior author of the new paper. The Intern Health Study enrolls thousands of new physicians across the United States each year who agree to let the research team sample their DNA, and to answer surveys before they begin their intern year of medical training and several times during that intense year of long hours and high demands.

MORE FROM THE LAB: Subscribe to our weekly newsletter

Sen and the study's first author, U-M research specialist Yu Fang, combined data across millions of sites within the human genomes to construct the MDD-PRS, and looked to see how well a person's "score" on this tool predicted with their scores on standard surveys of depressive symptoms. They also assessed whether the MDD-PRS worked through known mechanisms to depression, such personal and family history, childhood experience or general temperament.

The result: the MDD-PRS they developed accurately predicted the chance that certain interns would develop depression symptoms while under stress.

The ability to better predict who is most at risk for depression could allow us to better target our powerful interventions to prevent depression.
Srijan Sen, M.D., Ph.D.

"Interestingly, we found evidence that the association between MDD-PRS and depression is stronger in the presence of stress and that the additional predictive power of MDD-PRS under stress is largely independent of known risk factors for depression," says Sen, who holds the Eisenberg Professorship in Depression and Neurosciences at U-M and is part of the U-M Department of Psychiatry, the Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience Institute and the Depression Center. "These findings further our understanding of how genomics and stress interact and suggest that further investigation of the genomics of stress response can uncover novel mechanisms that lead to depression."

Notes of caution

The major limitation of the new study has to do with the source of the genetic information it's based on. Because most research on the genetics of depression has been done in people of European ancestry, the MDD-PRS tool used in the study is specific to people of that background.

In fact, the tool failed to predict depression symptoms among groups of interns of south Asian or east Asian background who were also taking part in the Intern Health Study.

Also, the group of interns in the study were young, with an average age of 27, and had already graduated medical school and been accepted into a residency training program, making them not representative of the general population.

SEE ALSO: 1 in 4 First-Year Residents May Meet Criteria for Clinical Depression

Despite these limitations, this test of the MDD-PRS suggests its potential use.

"We are optimistic that these findings will be transferred to other ethnic groups with improving multi-ethnic analysis techniques and more data collected from these populations," says Fang. She also notes the predictive power of the MDD-PRS score to predict resilience is stronger than its ability to predict susceptibility. "We hope this will ease the worry that this tool might be misused to discriminate against at-risk individuals."

More about the study

Sen, Fang and their colleagues used genetic linkages for depression identified through three major pools of DNA data: the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, the UK Biobank and the commercial genetics company 23andMe.

Sen's previous work has shown the rise in depression symptoms over the course of the intern year, and the importance of the personality trait known as neuroticism as well as of an intern's own history of stressful childhood events or traumas, and any past diagnosis of depression.

LISTEN UP: Add the new Michigan Medicine News Break to your Alexa-enabled device, or subscribe to our daily updates on iTunesGoogle Play and Stitcher.

Under low-stress conditions before intern year started, most of the genomic risk captured by MDD-PRS worked through these three established risk factors.

However, while the overall predictive power of MDD-PRS increased significantly under the stress of intern year, the predictive power of the three established factors remained the same.

"This suggests that as-yet-undiscovered factors accounted for the greater link between MDD-PRS and depression under the high stress conditions, suggesting a possible pathway to learning more about those undiscovered factors," says Sen.

Margit Burmeister, Ph.D., a U-M professor of human genetics and psychiatry who is a co-author of the new paper, says, "The MDD-PRS may be useful to discover such still unknown environmental factors, for example by searching for resiliency behaviors in people who are at genetically high risk, but unexpectedly did not become depressed during their internship." Burmeister is part of the U-M Molecular and Behavioral Neuroscience Institute, the Department of Computational Medicine & Bioinformatics and the Depression Center.

"The ability of better predict who is most at risk for depression could allow us to better target our powerful interventions to prevent depression," Sen concludes. "Studying individuals with a genomic protection against depression under stress can help us understand resilience"

In addition to Sen, Fang and Burmeister, the study's authors include Laura Scott, Ph.D. and Peter Song, Ph.D. of the U-M School of Public Health.

The study was funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (MH101459).

Paper cited: "Genomic prediction of depression risk and resilience under stress," Nature Human Behaviour. DOI: 10.1038/s41562-019-0759-3


More Articles About: Rounds Adult Psychiatric Treatment Depression Genetic Disorders Health Care Delivery, Policy and Economics Mental Health
Health Lab word mark overlaying blue cells
Health Lab

Explore a variety of health care news & stories by visiting the Health Lab home page for more articles.

Media Contact Public Relations

Department of Communication at Michigan Medicine

[email protected]

734-764-2220

Stay Informed

Want top health & research news weekly? Sign up for Health Lab’s newsletters today!

Subscribe
Featured News & Stories On left, a young boy in a wheelchair has his doctor standing to his left and his parent is standing to his right in a show of support. On the right side of the image, the boy is now an adult and is wondering about the cost of his care and if his questions will be answered.
Health Lab
Changing the definition of cerebral palsy
Cerebral palsy is defined as a childhood disorder, which fails to recognize adults living with the condition and the lack of care they receive once they age out of pediatric clinics.
floating AI-type images in red and blues and yellow on blue background
Health Lab
Racial differences in medical testing could introduce bias to AI models
Black patients are less likely than white patients to receive certain medical tests that doctors use to diagnose severe disease, impacting artificial intelligence data. But researchers have found a way to correct the bias in these data sets.
Minding Memory with a microphone and a shadow of a microphone on a blue background
Minding Memory
Can a personalized music intervention reduce behavioral disturbances in dementia?
While memory loss is generally thought of as the hallmark of dementia, behavioral and psychological symptoms of dementia like agitation, aggression, anxiety, and hallucinations are nearly universal, affecting almost all patients with advanced dementia. These behavioral disturbances are often the trigger for nursing home placement, and they can be highly distressing for both patients and their care partners. In today’s episode, Matt and Lauren speak with Dr. Ellen McCreedy, a researcher from the Brown School of Public Health who has conducted a study of personalized music intervention called Music & Memory for people living with dementia in nursing homes. Dr. McCreedy is a gerontologist and health services researcher who focuses on evaluation of non-pharmacologic interventions for managing behavioral disturbances of people living with dementia.
family of four sitting on couch in living room looking at an ipad laughing
Health Lab
Grandparents help grandkids in many ways – but the reverse may be true too
A poll shows the many ways (childcare, nutrition, major expenses) that grandparents help their grandchildren, but also suggests a link to older adults’ sense of isolation and their mental health.
woman touching back leaning forward in pain at desk light powder blue button down
Health Lab
Does virtual care mean low-value care? Study says no
The rise of telehealth has come with concerns that it could encourage use of low-value care that’s not needed. But a study suggests this hasn't happened.
Politics depression image
Health Lab
5 ways to manage politically induced stress
A Michigan Medicine psychiatrist offers strategies for how to be mindful of depression and anxiety symptoms around the topic of politics.