Abstract

BackgroundDisturbances in lipid metabolism have been linked to suicidal behaviour, but little is known about the association between suicide risk and abnormal glucose metabolism in depression. Hyperglycaemia and hyperinsulinaemia may increase the risk of depression and also the risk for suicide, we therefore studied associations between suicidal behaviour and disturbances in glucose metabolism in depressive patients who had been referred to depression nurse case managers.MethodsPatients aged 35 years and older (N = 448, mean age 51 years) who were experiencing a new depressive episode, who were referred to depression nurse case managers in 2008–2009 and who scored ≥10 on the Beck Depression Inventory were enrolled in this study. The study was conducted in municipalities within the Central Finland Hospital District (catchment area of 274 000 inhabitants) as part of the Finnish Depression and Metabolic Syndrome in Adults study. The patients’ psychiatric diagnoses and suicidal behaviour were confirmed by the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview. Blood samples, for glucose and lipid determinations, were drawn from participants after 12 h of fasting, which was followed by a 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) when blood was drawn at 0 and 2 h. Insulin resistance was measured by the Quantitative Insulin Sensitivity Check Index (QUICKI) method.ResultsSuicidal ideation (49 %) and previous suicide attempts (16 %) were common in patients with major depressive disorder or dysthymia. Patients with depression and suicidal behaviour had higher blood glucose concentrations at baseline and at 2 hours in the OGTT. Glucose levels associated positively with the prevalence of suicidal behaviour, and the linearity was significant at baseline (p for linearity: 0.012, adjusted for age and sex) and for 2-hour OGTT glucose (p for linearity: 0.004, adjusted for age and sex). QUICKI levels associated with suicidal behavior (p for linearity across tertiles of QUICKI: 0.026). Total and LDL cholesterol and triglyceride levels were also higher in those patients with suicidal behaviour. Multivariate analysis revealed that blood glucose levels, BDI scores and antidepressive medications associated with suicidal behaviour.ConclusionInsulin resistance and disturbances in glucose and lipid metabolism may be more common in middle-aged depressive patients with suicidal behaviour.

Highlights

  • Disturbances in lipid metabolism have been linked to suicidal behaviour, but little is known about the association between suicide risk and abnormal glucose metabolism in depression

  • Patients who were 35 years of age or older, who were having a new depressive episode, who were referred to depression nurse case managers in 2008–2009 and who scored ≥10 on the Beck Depression Inventory (BDI) [23] were enrolled in this study

  • The blood glucose concentrations associated positively with the prevalence of suicidal behaviour (Fig. 1), and linearity was significant for baseline glucose concentrations (p for linearity: 0.012, adjusted for age and sex) and for 2-hour oral glucose tolerance test (OGTT) glucose concentrations (p for linearity: 0.004, adjusted for age and sex adjusted)

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Summary

Introduction

Disturbances in lipid metabolism have been linked to suicidal behaviour, but little is known about the association between suicide risk and abnormal glucose metabolism in depression. Recent studies have reported an association between diabetes, depressive disorders and suicidal ideation [7, 8], in addition to an association between higher high glycated haemoglobin (HbA1c) values and suicidal ideation in subjects with diabetes [9]. Another cardiometabolic risk factor, disturbances in lipid metabolism, may associate with impulsiveness and suicidal behaviour [10]. A possible underlying pathophysiological mechanism for the emergence of abnormal glucose metabolism in depression and suicidal behaviour could lie in the interplay between serotonin and proinflammatory cytokines [18,19,20]

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