Abstract

To consider various precision medicine approaches to further elucidate the relationship between inflammation and depression and to illustrate how a neurodevelopmental perspective can help in this regard. Inflammation associates most strongly with phenotypes of depression that reflect illness behavior and/or metabolic dysfunction and obesity. A separate body of research has shown that maternal inflammation during pregnancy can alter brain circuitry important for mood regulation and/or reward in the developing fetus. Our research group is finding that maternal CRP levels differentially predict positive and negative affect in children assessed at age 4years, depending on the timing of plasma sampling during pregnancy and the sex of the child. Recent authors have stressed the need to use a variety of precision medicine approaches to refine our understanding of inflammation-depression links. Adding a neurodevelopmental perspective may help to address some of the methodological challenges in this active area of study.

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