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Papers of the Week


Papers: 29 Mar 2025 - 4 April 2025


2025 Apr 04


Sci Adv


40173244


11


14

Editor's Pick

The inflammatory and genetic mechanisms underlying the cumulative effect of co-occurring pain conditions on depression.

Authors

Jiang R, Geha P, Rosenblatt M, Wang Y, Fu Z, Foster M, Dai W, Calhoun VD, Sui J, Spann MN, Scheinost D

Abstract

Chronic pain conditions frequently coexist and share common genetic vulnerabilities. Despite evidence showing associations between pain and depression, the additive effect of co-occurring pain conditions on depression risk and the underlying mechanisms remain unclear. Leveraging data from 431,038 UK Biobank participants with 14-year follow-up, we found a significantly increased risk of depression incidence in individuals reporting pain, irrespective of body site or duration (acute or chronic), compared with pain-free individuals. The depression risk increased with the number of co-occurring pain sites. Mendelian randomization supported potential causal inference. We constructed a composite pain score by combining individual effects of acute or chronic pain conditions across eight body sites in a weighted manner. We found that depression risks increased monotonically in parallel with composite pain scores. Moreover, some inflammatory markers, including C-reactive protein, partially mediated the association between composite pain scores and depression risk. Considering the high prevalence of comorbid depression and pain, pain screening may help identify high-risk individuals for depression.