Independent and interactive associations of inflammation, vascular homeostasis markers, and childhood trauma with suicide attempt history
Ainoa García-Fernández, Aiste Lengvenyte, Elia Gourguechon-Buot, Emilie Olié, Fabrice Cognasse, Pilar A. Sáiz, Philippe Courtet

TL;DR
This study explores how inflammation, vascular markers, and childhood trauma are linked to a history of suicide attempts in people with depression.
Contribution
The study identifies TSP-2 and PDGF-BB as potential biomarkers with distinct roles in suicide attempt risk influenced by childhood trauma.
Findings
Childhood trauma is consistently associated with suicide attempts across all models.
Higher TSP-2 levels are independently linked to a history of suicide attempts.
Lower PDGF-BB levels combined with severe childhood trauma increase suicide attempt risk.
Abstract
The neurobiological basis of suicidal behaviour remains poorly understood. However, emerging evidence suggests that inflammation and vascular homeostasis factors may play a role in its pathophysiology. Childhood trauma, through immune system dysfunction and increased risk of suicidal behaviours, might influence these associations. This study examined the relationships between immune-inflammatory and vascular homeostasis-related markers and their interaction with childhood trauma in relation to a history of suicide attempts in individuals with depression. A total of 328 patients with major depression were recruited: 166 with a history of suicide attempts and 162 without. Using multivariate binary logistic regression models adjusted for cofounders, we examined the associations between childhood trauma, levels of platelet-related immune markers (serotonin, MCP-1, TSP-1, TSP-2, PDGF-AB,…
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Taxonomy
TopicsStress Responses and Cortisol · Cardiac Health and Mental Health
