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Multi-modal risk factors differentiate suicide attempters from ideators in military veterans with major depressive disorder.

Authors :
Goldstein, Kim E.
Pietrzak, Robert H.
Challman, Katelyn N.
Chu, King-Wai
Beck, Kevin D.
Brenner, Lisa A.
Interian, Alejandro
Myers, Catherine E.
Shafritz, Keith M.
Szeszko, Philip R.
Goodman, Marianne
Haznedar, M. Mehmet
Hazlett, Erin A.
Source :
Journal of Affective Disorders. Jan2025, Vol. 369, p588-598. 11p.
Publication Year :
2025

Abstract

The suicide rate for United States military veterans is 1.5× higher than that of non-veterans. To meaningfully advance suicide prevention efforts, research is needed to delineate factors that differentiate veterans with suicide attempt/s, particularly in high-risk groups, e.g., major depressive disorder (MDD), from those with suicidal ideation (no history of attempt/s). The current study aimed to identify clinical, neurocognitive, and neuroimaging variables that differentiate suicide-severity groups in veterans with MDD. Sixty-eight veterans with a DSM-5 diagnosis of MDD, including those with no ideation or suicide attempt (N = 21; MDD-SI/SA), ideation-only (N = 17; MDD + SI), and one-or-more suicide attempts (N = 30; MDD + SA; aborted, interrupted, actual attempts), participated in this study. Participants underwent a structured diagnostic interview, neurocognitive assessment, and 3 T-structural/diffusion tensor magnetic-resonance-imaging (MRI). Multinomial logistic regression models were conducted to identify variables that differentiated groups with respect to the severity of suicidal behavior. Relative to veterans with MDD-SI/SA, those with MDD + SA had significantly higher left cingulum fractional anisotropy, decreased attentional control on emotional-Stroop, and faster response time with intact accuracy on Go/No-Go. Relative to MDD + SI, MDD + SA had higher left cingulum fractional anisotropy and faster response time with intact accuracy on Go/No-Go. Findings are based on retrospective, cross-sectional data and cannot identify causal relationships. Also, a healthy control group was not included given the study's focus on differentiating suicide profiles in MDD. This study suggests that MRI and neurocognition differentiate veterans with MDD along the suicide-risk spectrum and could inform suicide-risk stratification and prevention efforts in veterans and other vulnerable populations. • Depressed veterans with history of suicide attempt exhibit cingulum alterations. • Attentional control skills help differentiate suicide-severity in depressed veterans. • Attentional control skills with suicide-specific information relates to suicidality. • MRI and neurocognition differentiate depressed veterans on the suicide-risk spectrum. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01650327
Volume :
369
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Journal of Affective Disorders
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
181092168
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2024.09.149