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| | | ![]() Genetic Mutations Associated With Suicide Risk Among Patients With Depression CHICAGO -- February 1, 2010 -- Single mutations in genes involved with nerve cell formation and growth appear to be associated with the risk of attempting suicide among individuals with depression, according to a study published early online and appearing in the April print issue of Archives of General Psychiatry. “Twin and family studies suggest that suicide and suicide attempts are heritable traits and likely part of the same phenotype, with completed suicide and suicide attempts clustering in the same families,” the authors wrote. “The genetic risk factors for suicide appear to be independent from the underlying psychiatric disorder.” Martin A. Kohli, PhD, then with the Max Planck Institute of Psychiatry, Munich, Germany, and now with the John P. Hussman Institute for Human Genomics, Miami, Florida, and colleagues investigated genetic variants among 394 depressed patients, including 113 who had attempted suicide, and 366 matched healthy control participants. The authors then replicated their results in 744 German patients with major depressive disorder (152 of whom had attempted suicide) and 921 African American non-psychiatric clinic patients (119 of whom had attempted suicide). The researchers investigated single-nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in 2 genes associated with the neurotrophic system. Five SNPs appeared significantly more common among individuals with a history of suicide attempts. Carriers of the 3 most significant markers had a 4.5-fold higher risk of attempting suicide than those who carried none of the 3 mutations. “The facts that the genetic associations with suicide attempts were stronger when comparing depressed patients with suicide attempts versus depressed patients without suicide attempts than with healthy control subjects and that these SNPs were not associated with major depressive disorder suggest that these associations are specific to suicide attempts” and not linked to depression in general, the authors wrote. “This supports the large body of evidence that dysfunctional neurotrophic signaling might be involved in the pathophysiology of suicidal behavior,” they concluded.
SOURCE: Archives of General Psychiatry
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