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Many people who die by suicide don’t have depression

Many people who die by suicide don’t have depression

  • Contrary to common assumptions, many people who die by suicide do not have depression or prior suicidal thoughts or behaviors.
  • A new genetic study at the University of Utah found that individuals without prior suicidality tend to have fewer psychiatric diagnoses and different genetic risk factors compared to those with known suicidality.
  • The research suggests that conventional wisdom on how to reduce suicide may need to be rethought, as increasing screening for associated conditions like depression may not be effective for this group.
  • Future research aims to identify subsets of individuals at risk and understand the contexts in which these risk characteristics are important, with the goal of delivering more targeted and effective care.
  • The study’s findings highlight the importance of considering environmental and societal factors alongside individual genetic risk factors in understanding suicide risk, and emphasize the need for better identification of at-risk individuals to provide them with necessary support and resources.

A person sits on a bed with their head on their knees in silhouette.

Many people who die by suicide aren’t depressed, new genetic research suggests.

Among friends and family of those who die by suicide, a common refrain is: I didn’t know.

While some people who die by suicide have prior attempts, about half of people who die by suicide have no documented suicidal thoughts or behaviors, nor do they have known psychiatric conditions associated with suicide risk, like depression. They have no previous clear indicators that they might be at risk at all.

If you need help, call 988 to reach a free, confidential 24/7 support line for suicidal crisis or emotional distress.

A new genetic study at the University of Utah found that people in this group of unexpected suicides aren’t just flying under the clinical radar via lower access to psychiatric services—their underlying risk factors may be fundamentally different.

The research found that people who die by suicide without prior non-fatal suicidal thoughts or behaviors have fewer psychiatric diagnoses and also fewer underlying genetic risk factors for psychiatric conditions compared to people who had shown these warning signs before dying by suicide.

“There are a lot of people out there who may be at risk of suicide where it’s not just that you’ve missed that they’re depressed, it’s likely that they’re in fact actually not depressed,” says Hilary Coon, professor of psychiatry in the Spencer Fox Eccles School of Medicine and first author on the study.

“That is important in widening our view of who may be at risk. We need to start to think about aspects leading to risk in different ways.”

The results, published in JAMA Network Open, upend conventional beliefs about suicide risk and suggest new approaches to help save lives.

Other research had shown that people who die by suicide without prior known suicidality are less likely to have psychiatric diagnoses, such as depression, compared to people with documented suicidal thoughts or behaviors. But nobody knew the root cause of this difference. Maybe, researchers thought, people without known suicidality are still just as depressed or anxious—they’re just undiagnosed.

But Coon’s team was surprised to find that this isn’t the case. Instead, they found that this group has different genetic risk factors from people with known suicidality. By comprehensively analyzing anonymized genetic data from more than 2,700 people who died by suicide, the researchers found that people without prior suicidality tend to have fewer genetic risk factors for several psychiatric conditions, including major depressive disorder, anxiety, Alzheimer’s disease, and PTSD.

The genetic data also suggests that this group isn’t any more likely than the general population to have milder conditions, like depressed mood and neuroticism. This means that conventional wisdom on how to reduce suicide may need to be rethought.

“A tenet in suicide prevention has been that we just need to screen people better for associated conditions like depression,” Coon explains. “And if people had the same sort of underlying vulnerabilities, then additional efforts in screening might be very helpful. But for those who actually have different underlying vulnerabilities, then increasing that screening might not help for them.”

Figuring out how to find and treat these “hidden” at-risk individuals is a major focus of Coon’s upcoming research. Previous studies with clinical data have shown potential links between suicide risk and hard-to-treat conditions like chronic pain. Coon is also investigating how other physical disorders, such as inflammation and respiratory conditions, may impact suicide risk. Her work will also focus on traits that may confer resilience to suicide.

Coon emphasizes that, on their own, individual genetic risk factors related to suicide have very small effects on risk, and there’s no single gene—or combination of genes—that causes suicide. Environmental and societal contexts are crucial contributors to risk, and understanding the interplay between the environment and underlying biology will be essential to discovering who’s at risk.

“We hope our work will begin to define subsets of individuals at risk, and also the contexts in which these risk characteristics may be important,” Coon says.

“If people have a certain type of clinical diagnosis that makes them particularly vulnerable within particular environmental contexts, they still may not ever say they’re suicidal. We hope our work may help reveal traits and contexts associated with high risk so that doctors can deliver care more effectively and specifically. ”

Better identification of at-risk individuals will help people get the care they need.

If you need help, call 988 to reach a free, confidential 24/7 support line for suicidal crisis or emotional distress.

The work was supported by the National Institute of Mental Health, Janssen Research & Development, the American Foundation for Suicide Prevention, the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation–National Alliance for Research on Schizophrenia and Depression, and the Clark Tanner Foundation.

Content is solely the responsibility of the authors and does not necessarily represent the official views of the National Institutes of Health.

Source: University of Utah

The post Many people who die by suicide don’t have depression appeared first on Futurity.

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Q. What is surprising about the genetic research on people who die by suicide without prior suicidal thoughts or behaviors?
A. The research found that these individuals have different genetic risk factors from people with known suicidality, rather than being undiagnosed cases of depression.

Q. How many people who die by suicide do not have documented suicidal thoughts or behaviors?
A. About half of people who die by suicide have no documented suicidal thoughts or behaviors, nor do they have known psychiatric conditions associated with suicide risk.

Q. What did the researchers find about the genetic data of people without prior suicidality?
A. They found that this group has fewer genetic risk factors for several psychiatric conditions, including major depressive disorder, anxiety, Alzheimer’s disease, and PTSD.

Q. Why might increasing screening efforts not be helpful for individuals with different underlying vulnerabilities?
A. Because conventional wisdom on how to reduce suicide may need to be rethought, as these individuals may have different underlying vulnerabilities that require different approaches.

Q. What is the focus of Hilary Coon’s upcoming research?
A. Figuring out how to find and treat “hidden” at-risk individuals, including those with hard-to-treat conditions like chronic pain and inflammation.

Q. How do environmental and societal contexts contribute to suicide risk?
A. Environmental and societal contexts are crucial contributors to risk, and understanding the interplay between the environment and underlying biology will be essential to discovering who is at risk.

Q. What does Coon emphasize about individual genetic risk factors related to suicide?
A. That they have very small effects on risk, and there is no single gene or combination of genes that causes suicide.

Q. Why is better identification of at-risk individuals important?
A. It will help people get the care they need, as conventional diagnoses may not capture the full picture of an individual’s risk.

Q. What support line can be reached for suicidal crisis or emotional distress?
A. The 988 free, confidential 24/7 support line.