Abstract

Background The association between Type 2 Diabetes (T2DM) and depression has been consistently reported in epidemiological studies. The T2DM-depression link may be symptom-specific. We therefore examined whether polygenic risk scores for T2DM predict specific depressive symptoms in the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium Major Depressive Disorder Phase 2 (PGC-MDD-29) dataset. Methods T2DM-polygenic scores were constructed from the association summary statistics of Diabetes Genetic Replication And Meta-analysis Consortium (DIAGRAM; 12,171 cases and 56,862 controls) at association p-value threshold of 0.5 (PT Results The four cohorts from PGC-MDD-29 dataset included in this study were: i) CoFaMS, ii) PsyCoLaus, iii) NESDA/NTR and iv) SHP0. The combined data consists of 6542 participants of European ancestry, with 2,360 cases of depression and 4,182 controls. Feelings of guilt/worthlessness is the only significant depressive symptom predictor for T2DM-polygenic scores (β=-0.0041; p=0.0037). It is present in 1,771 (75%) cases and 120 (3%) controls. This effect came primarily from depression cases (β=-0.0058; p=0.0002), with limited information from controls (β=-0.0003; p=0.7903). Discussion This study provides the first evidence of a shared genetic aetiology between T2DM and feelings of guilt/worthlessness, particularly in people with depression. No association was found between T2DM-polygenic scores and depressive symptoms which are more related to T2DM, such as changes in appetite/weight. Previous studies have reported an association between appetite/weight and inflammatory markers but not with glucose-related measures. Longitudinal prospective studies examining the association between specific symptoms of T2DM and depression are needed to clarify the underlying mechanism.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call