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A study on the complex interplay between inflammation and severe mental disorders (SMInflam)

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 August 2024

B. Della Rocca*
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
M. Luciano
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
G. De Felice
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
M. Di Vincenzo
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
C. Toni
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
E. Arsenio
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
G. Sampogna
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
A. Fiorillo
Affiliation:
Università della Campania “L. Vanvitelli”, Naples, Italy
*
*Corresponding author.

Abstract

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Introduction

An alteration of inflammatory indices has been reported in several major mental disorders. This alteration seems to be related to disease severity and treatment resistance, but its pathophysiological meaning remains to be established. Patients with severe mental disorders tend to have increased levels of circulating cytokines and increased microglial activity in the central nervous system, suggesting that inflammation may contribute to the onset, or chronicity, of mental disorders. Detecting inflammation‐relevant symptom clusters across mental disorders may represent an important step towards precision medicine in psychiatry.

Objectives

The SMInflam project is a longitudinal, observational, real-world study which aims to: assess a set of inflammatory indices at baseline in a sample of patients with the diagnosis of a major mental disorder; identify inflammatory profiles of these patients using a latent class analysis approach; assess the response to pharmacological treatments of patients with different inflammatory profiles; re-assess the inflammatory indices and profiles at several times during follow-up and test their correlation with the evolution of psychopathology.

Methods

The sample will consist of 50 patients with a diagnosis of a major mental disorders consecutively enrolled at the outpatient unit of the Department of Psychiatry of University of Campania. All enrolled patients will be administered a set of reliable and validated psychopathological assessment tools. We will perform a complete physical evaluation, and a battery of laboratory tests. Peripheral markers of chronic inflammation will be assessed. Clinical and biological assessments will be performed at baseline (T0) and after 3 and 6 months (respectively, T1 and T2).

Results

Expected results include the evaluation of the levels of inflammatory indices in a varied sample of patients with severe mental disorders. According to the pre-post design, these aspects will be evaluated before the start and at the follow-up. We will also take into consideration the role of confounding factors such as age and gender, which represent a critical biological variable influencing such inflammatory pathways.

Conclusions

Collected data will be used for having a more informative, reliable and valid characterization of psychopathology in a vast sample of patients with severe mental disorders. Our study may represent the first of a new wave of methodologically-sound studies on the role of inflammation and psychopathology in patients with severe mental disorders.

Disclosure of Interest

None Declared

Type
Abstract
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of European Psychiatric Association
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