Investigation of peripheral inflammatory biomarkers in association with suicide risk in major depression
B. Petho, T. Tenyi, R. Herold, P. Osvath, V. Voros, D. Simon, C. Molnar, M. A. Kovacs

TL;DR
This study explores how immune system markers relate to suicide risk in people with major depression, finding that certain blood cell ratios may indicate higher risk.
Contribution
The study identifies neutrophil-to-lymphocyte ratio (NLR) and monocyte-to-lymphocyte ratio (MLR) as potential biomarkers for acute and long-term suicide risk in major depression.
Findings
Patients with recent suicide attempts showed significantly higher neutrophil granulocyte count, NLR, monocyte count, MLR, leukocyte count, and ESR.
AD treatment decreased neutrophil granulocyte count and NLR, but had no effect on other parameters.
MLR was elevated in high suicide risk patients and remained unaffected by antidepressant therapy.
Abstract
Suicide is the most severe consequence of major depressive disorder (MDD). The most novel researches assume the role of immunological dysregulation in the background – several studies have reported alterations of inflammatory cells related to both MDD and suicidal behaviour (SB). Changes in the number of certain immune cells and their ratios have been proposed as potential biomarkers of suicide risk (SR). The aim of our research was to investigate alterations of these values related not only to MDD as an assumed inflammatory state, but also to an increased risk of SB. In our restrospective cohort study carried out between January 2015 and January 2020, we investigated laboratory parameters of psychiatric patients diagnosed with MDD (n=101). Individuals with recent (≤48 hours prior) suicide attempt (SA) (n=22) and with past SA (>48 hours prior) (n=19) represented the high SR group. MDD…
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Taxonomy
TopicsTryptophan and brain disorders
