Pulse Brain · Growing Health Evidence Index
Peer-reviewed

Distinct biological signature and modifiable risk factors underlie the comorbidity between major depressive disorder and cardiovascular disease

Jacob Bergstedt, Joëlle A. Pasman, Ziyan Ma, Arvid Harder, Shuyang Yao, Nadine Parker, Jorien L. Treur, Dirk J. A. Smit, Oleksandr Frei, Alexey Shadrin, Joeri Meijsen, Qing Shen, Sara Hägg, Per Tornvall, Alfonso Buil, Thomas Werge, Jens Hjerling‐Leffler, Thomas D. Als, Anders D. Børglum, Cathryn M. Lewis, Andrew M. McIntosh, Unnur Valdimarsdóttir, Ole A. Andreassen, Patrick F. Sullivan, Yi Lu, Fang Fang

Nature Cardiovascular Research · 2024

Read source ↗ All evidence

Summary

Major depressive disorder (MDD) and cardiovascular disease (CVD) are often comorbid, resulting in excess morbidity and mortality. Here we show that CVDs share most of their genetic risk factors with MDD. Multivariate genome-wide association analysis of shared genetic liability between MDD and atherosclerotic CVD revealed seven loci and distinct patterns of tissue and brain cell-type enrichments, suggesting the involvement of the thalamus. Part of the genetic overlap was explained by shared inflammatory, metabolic and psychosocial or lifestyle risk factors. Our data indicated causal effects of genetic liability to MDD on CVD risk, but not from most CVDs to MDD, and showed that the causal effects were partly explained by metabolic and psychosocial or lifestyle factors. The distinct signature

Source type
Peer-reviewed study
DOI
10.1038/s44161-024-00488-y
Catalogue ID
SNmoixnwcs-92lbqg
Pulse AI · ask about this record

Dig deeper with Pulse AI.

Pulse AI has read the whole catalogue. Ask about this record, its theme, or how the findings apply to UK farming and policy — every answer cites the underlying studies.