Disclosure of interest
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest concerning this article.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 17 April 2020
Recent research on late-life depression (LLD) pathophysiology suggests the implication of abnormalities in cerebral white matter [1] and particularly in interhemispheric transfer [2]. Corpus callosum (CC) is the main brain interhemispheric commissure [3]. Hence, we investigated the association between baseline CC measures and risk of LDD.
We studied 467 non-demented individuals without LLD at baseline from a cohort of community-dwelling people aged 80 years or younger (the ESPRIT study). LLD was assessed at year 2, 4, 7 and 10 of the study follow-up. At baseline, T1-weighted magnetic resonance images were manually traced to measure the mid-sagittal areas of the anterior, mid and posterior CC. Multivariate Cox proportional hazards models stratified by sex were used to predict LLD incidence over 10 years.
A significant interaction between gender and CC size was found (P = 0.02). LLD incidence in elderly women, but not in men, was significantly associated with smaller anterior (HR 1.37 [1.05–1.79] P = 0.017), mid (HR 1.43 [1.09–1.86] P = 0.008), posterior (HR1.39 [1.12–1.74] P = 0.002) and total (HR 1.53 [1.16–2.00] P = 0.002) CC areas at baseline in Cox models adjusted for age, education, global cognitive impairment, ischemic pathologies, left-handedness, white matter lesion, intracranial volume and past depression.
The main limitation was the retrospective assessment of major depression.
Smaller CC size is a predictive factor of incident LLD over 10 years in elderly women. Our finding suggests a possible role of CC and reduced interhemispheric connectivity in LLD pathophysiology. Extensive explorations are needed to clarify the mechanisms leading to CC morphometric changes in mood disorders.
The authors declare that they have no conflicts of interest concerning this article.
Comments
No Comments have been published for this article.