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Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults

Depression, one of the most common diseases in older adults, carries significant risk for morbidity and mortality. Because of the burgeoning population of older adults, the enormous burden of late-life depression, and the limited efficacy of current antidepressants in older adults, biologically plau...

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Autores principales: Irwin, Michael R., Boyle, Chloe C., Cho, Joshua H., Piber, Dominique, Breen, Elizabeth C., Sadeghi, Nina, Castillo, Daisy, Smith, Michael, Eisenberger, Naomi I., Olmstead, Richard
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9984307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36879913
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2023.100601
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author Irwin, Michael R.
Boyle, Chloe C.
Cho, Joshua H.
Piber, Dominique
Breen, Elizabeth C.
Sadeghi, Nina
Castillo, Daisy
Smith, Michael
Eisenberger, Naomi I.
Olmstead, Richard
author_facet Irwin, Michael R.
Boyle, Chloe C.
Cho, Joshua H.
Piber, Dominique
Breen, Elizabeth C.
Sadeghi, Nina
Castillo, Daisy
Smith, Michael
Eisenberger, Naomi I.
Olmstead, Richard
author_sort Irwin, Michael R.
collection PubMed
description Depression, one of the most common diseases in older adults, carries significant risk for morbidity and mortality. Because of the burgeoning population of older adults, the enormous burden of late-life depression, and the limited efficacy of current antidepressants in older adults, biologically plausible models that translate into selective depression prevention strategies are needed. Insomnia predicts depression recurrence and is a modifiable target to prevent incident and recurrent depression in older adults. Yet, it is not known how insomnia gets converted into biological- and affective risk for depression, which is critical for identification of molecular targets for pharmacologic interventions, and for refinement of insomnia treatments that target affective responding to improve efficacy. Sleep disturbance activates inflammatory signaling and primes immune responses to subsequent inflammatory challenge. In turn, inflammatory challenge induces depressive symptoms, which correlate with activation of brain regions implicated in depression. This study hypothesizes that insomnia serves as a vulnerability factor for inflammation-related depression; older adults with insomnia will show heightened inflammatory- and affective responding to inflammatory challenge as compared to those without insomnia. To test this hypothesis, this protocol paper describes a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind study of low dose endotoxin in older adults (n = 160; 60–80 y) with insomnia vs. comparison controls without insomnia. The aims of this study are to examine differences in depressive symptoms, measures of negative affective responding, and measures of positive affective responding as a function of insomnia and inflammatory challenge. If the hypotheses are confirmed, older adults with two “hits”, insomnia and inflammatory activation, would represent a high risk group to be prioritized for monitoring and for depression prevention efforts using treatments that target insomnia or inflammation. Moreover, this study will inform the development of mechanism-based treatments that target affect responses in addition to sleep behaviors, and which might also be coupled with efforts to reduce inflammation to optimize efficacy of depression prevention.
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spelling pubmed-99843072023-03-05 Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults Irwin, Michael R. Boyle, Chloe C. Cho, Joshua H. Piber, Dominique Breen, Elizabeth C. Sadeghi, Nina Castillo, Daisy Smith, Michael Eisenberger, Naomi I. Olmstead, Richard Brain Behav Immun Health Full Length Article Depression, one of the most common diseases in older adults, carries significant risk for morbidity and mortality. Because of the burgeoning population of older adults, the enormous burden of late-life depression, and the limited efficacy of current antidepressants in older adults, biologically plausible models that translate into selective depression prevention strategies are needed. Insomnia predicts depression recurrence and is a modifiable target to prevent incident and recurrent depression in older adults. Yet, it is not known how insomnia gets converted into biological- and affective risk for depression, which is critical for identification of molecular targets for pharmacologic interventions, and for refinement of insomnia treatments that target affective responding to improve efficacy. Sleep disturbance activates inflammatory signaling and primes immune responses to subsequent inflammatory challenge. In turn, inflammatory challenge induces depressive symptoms, which correlate with activation of brain regions implicated in depression. This study hypothesizes that insomnia serves as a vulnerability factor for inflammation-related depression; older adults with insomnia will show heightened inflammatory- and affective responding to inflammatory challenge as compared to those without insomnia. To test this hypothesis, this protocol paper describes a placebo-controlled, randomized, double-blind study of low dose endotoxin in older adults (n = 160; 60–80 y) with insomnia vs. comparison controls without insomnia. The aims of this study are to examine differences in depressive symptoms, measures of negative affective responding, and measures of positive affective responding as a function of insomnia and inflammatory challenge. If the hypotheses are confirmed, older adults with two “hits”, insomnia and inflammatory activation, would represent a high risk group to be prioritized for monitoring and for depression prevention efforts using treatments that target insomnia or inflammation. Moreover, this study will inform the development of mechanism-based treatments that target affect responses in addition to sleep behaviors, and which might also be coupled with efforts to reduce inflammation to optimize efficacy of depression prevention. Elsevier 2023-02-03 /pmc/articles/PMC9984307/ /pubmed/36879913 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2023.100601 Text en © 2023 The Authors https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
spellingShingle Full Length Article
Irwin, Michael R.
Boyle, Chloe C.
Cho, Joshua H.
Piber, Dominique
Breen, Elizabeth C.
Sadeghi, Nina
Castillo, Daisy
Smith, Michael
Eisenberger, Naomi I.
Olmstead, Richard
Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title_full Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title_fullStr Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title_full_unstemmed Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title_short Sleep and Healthy Aging Research on Depression (SHARE-D) randomized controlled trial: Protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
title_sort sleep and healthy aging research on depression (share-d) randomized controlled trial: protocol overview of an experimental model of depression with insomnia, inflammation, and affect mechanisms in older adults
topic Full Length Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9984307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/36879913
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.bbih.2023.100601
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