Genetically predicted higher triglyceride levels were causally associated with depressive symptoms (β 0.0346; 95% CI 0.0114-0.0578) and deliberate self-harm or suicide (OR 2.514; 95% CI 1.579-4.003).
Observational (n=668,936)
Yes
Effect estimate: β 0.0346 (95% CI 0.0114-0.0578)
BACKGROUND: The etiology of depression remains poorly understood. Changes in blood lipid levels were reported to be associated with depression and suicide, however study findings were mixed. METHODS: We performed a two-sample Mendelian randomisation (MR) analysis to investigate the causal relationship between blood lipids and depression phenotypes, based on large-scale GWAS summary statistics (N = 188 577/480 359 for lipid/depression traits respectively). Five depression-related phenotypes were included, namely major depression (MD; from PGC), depressive symptoms (DS; from SSGAC), longest duration and number of episodes of low mood, and history of deliberate self-harm (DSH)/suicide (from UK Biobank). MR was conducted with inverse-variance weighted (MR-IVW), Egger and Generalised Summary-data-based MR (GSMR) methods. RESULTS: There was consistent evidence that triglyceride (TG) is causally associated with DS (MR-IVW β for one-s.d. increase in TG = 0.0346, 95% CI 0.0114-0.0578), supported by MR-IVW and GSMR and multiple r2 clumping thresholds. We also observed relatively consistent associations of TG with DSH/suicide (MR-Egger OR = 2.514, CI 1.579-4.003). There was moderate evidence for positive associations of TG with MD and the number of episodes of low mood. For HDL-c, we observed moderate evidence for causal associations with DS and MD. LDL-c and TC did not show robust causal relationships with depression phenotypes, except for weak evidence that LDL-c is inversely related to DSH/suicide. We did not detect significant associations when depression phenotypes were treated as exposures. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides evidence to a causal relationship between TG, and to a lesser extent, altered cholesterol levels with depression phenotypes. Further studies on its mechanistic basis and the effects of lipid-lowering therapies are warranted.
So et al. (Fri,) conducted a observational in Depression phenotypes (n=668,936). Blood lipids (Triglycerides, HDL-c, LDL-c, Total Cholesterol) was evaluated on Depressive symptoms (DS) (β 0.0346, 95% CI 0.0114-0.0578). Genetically predicted higher triglyceride levels were causally associated with depressive symptoms (β 0.0346; 95% CI 0.0114-0.0578) and deliberate self-harm or suicide (OR 2.514; 95% CI 1.579-4.003).
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