The purpose of this study is to determine differences between the immune responses in healthy and depressed people. Participants will receive the influenza vaccine and their responses will be monitored. This study will recruit 15 healthy and 60 depressed participants.
The purpose of this study is to determine differences between the immune responses in healthy and depressed people. Specifically subjects are provided a mild immune stimulus, an influenza vaccine, and their responses are monitored. The goals are to determine whether patients with depression experience a temporary worsening of mood in response to the stimulus and whether this is associated with measurable differences in the cytokine response to the vaccine. Additionally, patients with depression may be less likely to mount a successful antibody response to vaccination as healthy people based on circumstantial evidence, and this study will assess whether this the case. This study aims to recruit a sample of 15 healthy and 60 depressed participants. The 15 healthy participants will be age and gender matched to the first 15 depressed participants recruited. Three more sets of age and gender matched depressed subjects will be recruited. This will result in 15 sets of "quintuplets" (4 depressed and one healthy), that are matched by age and gender. The study consists of four visits. The first visit is the baseline assessment where participants will receive the influenza vaccine. Participants will then return 1, 3 and 28 days after receiving the vaccine to assess their responses.
Study Type
INTERVENTIONAL
Allocation
NON_RANDOMIZED
Purpose
DIAGNOSTIC
Masking
NONE
Enrollment
75
The appropriate quadrivalent influenza vaccine for the give year will be given to subjects.
Marisa Toups
Austin, Texas, United States
RECRUITINGPositive and Negative Affect Schedules Score
We will compute change in scores on the PANAS-x subscales between baseline and day 1. Self reported assessment that contains both positive and negative words and phrases that describe different feelings and emotions. Subjects read each item and mark the appropriate answer for how they feel right now as they fill out the form. Possible answers and the associated score are: (1) Not at all, (2) A little, (3) Moderately, (4) Quite a bit, (5) Extremely. To rate, responses to items in each scale are summed. The scales in the PANAS are listed below with the number of items in that scale in parentheses followed by the total range of the scale. General Dimensions Negative Affect (10) 10-50 General Dimensions of Positive Affect (10) 10-50 Negative Emotion Fear (6) 6-30 Hostility (6): 6-30 Guilt (6): 6-30 Sadness (5) 5- 25 Positive Emotion Joviality (8) 8-40 Self-Assurance (6) 6-30 Attentiveness (4) 4-20 Other Affective States Shyness (4) 4-20 Fatigue (4) 4-20 Serenity (3) 3-15
Time frame: 1 Day
Change in Cytokine Concentration (pg/mL)
We will compute differences in cytokine (IFN- α, IFN-y, IL-6, IL1-β and TNF-α) values for each subject between baseline and day 1 and days 1 and 3. Using OLS regression we will compute regressions between hypothesis appropriate time points using baseline CRP, QIDS, PANAS score and BMI as covariates.
Time frame: 3 Days
Difference in PGE4/LipoxinA4 Ratio
After determining the difference in the PGE4/LipoxinA4 ratio between days 1 and 3, we will perform a similar regression.
Time frame: 3 Days
Tryptophan Metabolites
We will calculate difference between baseline and day 1 in the KYN/TRP and KYNA/QUIN ratios and us them in regression models as above, correcting for two tests.
Time frame: 1 Day
HPA Axis
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To test the hypothesis that ACTH/cortisol affects peak inflammatory cytokine levels in MDD, we will use similar OLS regression models including HPA-axis response as a covariate and examining its interaction with cytokines as the dependent variables.
Time frame: 3 Days