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History of Peripartum Depression Moderates the Association Between Estradiol Polygenic Risk Scores and Basal Ganglia Volumes in Major Depressive Disorder

Academic Article
Publication Date:
2025
Short description:
History of Peripartum Depression Moderates the Association Between Estradiol Polygenic Risk Scores and Basal Ganglia Volumes in Major Depressive Disorder / Harrington, Y.A., Paolini, M., Fortaner-Uya, L., Maccario, M., Melloni, E.M.T., Poletti, S., Lorenzi, C., Zanardi, R., Colombo, C., Benedetti, F.. - In: BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY. - ISSN 2451-9022. - 10:1(2025), pp. 7-16. [10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.09.011]
abstract:
Background: The neurobiological differences between women who have experienced a peripartum episode and those who have only had episodes outside of this period are not well understood. Methods: Sixty-four parous female patients with major depressive disorder who had either a positive (n = 30) or negative (n = 34) history of peripartum depression (PPD) underwent magnetic resonance imaging acquisition to obtain structural brain images. An independent 2-sample t test comparing patients with and without a history of PPD was performed using voxel-based morphometry analysis. Additionally, polygenic risk scores for estradiol were calculated, and a moderation analysis was conducted between 3 estradiol polygenic risk scores and PPD history status on extracted cluster volumes using IBM SPSS PROCESS macro. Results: The voxel-based morphometry analysis identified larger gray matter volumes in bilateral clusters encompassing the putamen, pallidum, caudate, and thalamus in patients with a PPD history than in patients without a history. The moderation analysis identified a significant interaction effect between 2 estradiol polygenic risk scores and PPD history on gray matter cluster volumes, with a positive effect in women with PPD and a negative effect in women with no history of PPD. Conclusions: Our findings demonstrate that women who have experienced a peripartum episode are neurobiologically distinct from women who have no history of PPD in a cluster within the basal ganglia, an area important for motivation, decision making, and emotional processing. Furthermore, we show that the genetic load for estradiol has a differing effect in this area based on PPD status, which supports the claim that PPD is associated with sensitivity to sex steroid hormones.
Iris type:
1.1 Articolo in rivista
List of contributors:
Harrington, Y. A.; Paolini, M.; Fortaner-Uya, L.; Maccario, M.; Melloni, E. M. T.; Poletti, S.; Lorenzi, C.; Zanardi, R.; Colombo, C.; Benedetti, F.
Authors of the University:
BENEDETTI FRANCESCO
COLOMBO CRISTINA ANNA
Handle:
https://iris.unisr.it/handle/20.500.11768/180639
Published in:
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Journal
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URL

https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2451902224002799?via=ihub
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