Assessing depression recurrence, cognitive burden, and neurobiological homeostasis in late life: Design and rationale of the REMBRANDT study

Warren D. Taylor , Olusola Ajilore , Helmet T. Karim , Meryl A. Butters , Robert Krafty , Brian D. Boyd , Layla Banihashemi , Sarah M. Szymkowicz , Claire Ryan , Jason Hassenstab , Bennett A. Landman , Carmen Andreescu
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Abstract

Background

Late-life depression is characterized by disability, cognitive impairment and decline, and a high risk of recurrence following remission. Aside from past psychiatric history, prognostic neurobiological and clinical factors influencing recurrence risk are unclear. Moreover, it is unclear if cognitive impairment predisposes to recurrence, or whether recurrent episodes may accelerate brain aging and cognitive decline. The purpose of the REMBRANDT study (Recurrence markers, cognitive burden, and neurobiological homeostasis in late-life depression) is to better elucidate these relationships and identify phenotypic, cognitive, environmental, and neurobiological factors contributing to and predictive of depression recurrence.

Methods

Across three sites, REMBRANDT will enroll 300 depressed elders who will receive antidepressant treatment. The goal is to enroll 210 remitted depressed participants and 75 participants with no mental health history into a two-year longitudinal phase focusing on depression recurrence. Participants are evaluated every 2 months with deeper assessments occurring every 8 months, including structural and functional neuroimaging, environmental stress assessments, deep symptom phenotyping, and two weeks of ‘burst’ ecological momentary assessments to elucidate variability in symptoms and cognitive performance. A broad neuropsychological test battery is completed at the beginning and end of the longitudinal study.

Significance

REMBRANDT will improve our understanding of how alterations in neural circuits and cognition that persist during remission contribute to depression recurrence vulnerability. It will also elucidate how these processes may contribute to cognitive impairment and decline. This project will obtain deep phenotypic data that will help identify vulnerability and resilience factors that can help stratify individual clinical risk.

评估晚年抑郁症复发、认知负担和神经生物学平衡:REMBRANDT 研究的设计与原理
背景晚年抑郁症的特点是残疾、认知功能障碍和衰退,以及缓解后复发的高风险。除既往精神病史外,影响复发风险的神经生物学和临床预后因素尚不明确。此外,认知障碍是否会导致复发,或者反复发作是否会加速大脑老化和认知功能衰退,目前也不清楚。REMBRANDT研究(晚年抑郁症的复发标志物、认知负担和神经生物学平衡)旨在更好地阐明这些关系,并确定导致抑郁症复发和预测抑郁症复发的表型、认知、环境和神经生物学因素。目标是招募 210 名病情缓解的抑郁症患者和 75 名无精神疾病史的患者,进行为期两年的纵向研究,重点关注抑郁症的复发情况。参与者每 2 个月接受一次评估,每 8 个月进行一次更深入的评估,包括结构和功能神经影像学、环境压力评估、深度症状表型以及两周的 "突发 "生态瞬间评估,以阐明症状和认知表现的变异性。REMBRANDT将加深我们对缓解期持续存在的神经回路和认知改变如何导致抑郁症复发的理解。它还将阐明这些过程是如何导致认知障碍和认知能力下降的。该项目将获得深入的表型数据,这些数据将有助于识别脆弱性和恢复力因素,从而帮助对个体临床风险进行分层。
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来源期刊
Journal of mood and anxiety disorders
Journal of mood and anxiety disorders Applied Psychology, Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Clinical Psychology, Psychiatry and Mental Health, Psychology (General), Behavioral Neuroscience
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