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Neurophysiology, Estrogen, and Stress Exposure in the Emergence of Depression in Adolescent Girls (EVOLVE)

University of North Carolina (UNC) logo

University of North Carolina (UNC)

Status

Completed

Conditions

Adolescent Development
Emotional Disturbances
Stress

Treatments

Behavioral: Trier Social Stress Test
Behavioral: Emotional go/no-go task

Study type

Observational

Funder types

Other

Identifiers

NCT03450135
2KR961702 (Other Grant/Funding Number)
17-2173

Details and patient eligibility

About

The prevalence of adolescent depression is steadily rising in the U.S., especially among adolescent girls. Currently 20% of adolescent girls experience major depression compared with 6% of boys (National Institute of Mental Health, 2016). The profound gender disparity in depression that emerges at puberty, but not before, implicates a role of ovarian steroid hormones in promoting affective (mood) symptoms in adolescent girls. In addition to dramatic physical maturation and a rapidly changing reproductive hormone environment at puberty, adolescence is also a time of exposure to substantial psychosocial stress, particularly in girls. It is well documented that stress interferes with the maturation of neurodevelopmental trajectories and is a critical precipitating factor in the pathway to psychopathology. However, the neuropathophysiological mechanisms linking stress exposure and sensitivity to ovarian hormone fluctuations at puberty to the onset and maintenance of depression symptoms in adolescence have yet to be elucidated, and is the purpose of this research.

Full description

Framed within a diathesis-stress model of disease, the primary objective of this research is to determine a pathophysiological role of estradiol (E2) variability in the context of severe psychosocial stress exposure in regulating neurophysiological correlates of affective state change in girls (ages 11-14) during the pubertal transition (i.e., Tanner developmental stages 3 or 4). The rationale for examining E2 variability as a diathesis for mood impairment is twofold. First, sensitivity to hormonal flux during specific reproductive events has been shown to trigger affective symptoms in susceptible women, and second, E2 is a powerful neuroregulator of neural networks implicated in depression.

55 peripubertal girls undergoing a healthy pubertal transition will be recruited for the study. Over an 8-week period, depression symptoms (Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression Scale for Children (CES-DC)), anxiety (State Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI-C)), and perceived stress (perceived stress scale (PSS)), and salivary E2 measured by liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS) will be assessed on a weekly basis. An electroencephalogram (EEG) during an emotional go/no-go task will be performed after the 8-week collection period to probe neurophysiological correlates of maturing fronto-limbic circuitry and assess key domains of cognitive and emotional processing impacted by the hormonal milieu. At the follow-up visit, an acute psychosocial stressor (Trier Social Stress Test) will be administered to examine cortisol and autonomic stress reactivity. The central hypothesis of the proposed research is that the amplitude and synchrony of frontal neural oscillations evoked during the cognitive-affective processing paradigm, and cortisol reactivity to the psychosocial stressor will partially mediate the relationship between greater E2 variability and elevated depression symptoms in peripubertal girls, and this relationship will be particularly strong in girls who have experienced recent (within six months) psychosocial stress.

Enrollment

53 patients

Sex

Female

Ages

11 to 14 years old

Volunteers

Accepts Healthy Volunteers

Inclusion criteria

  • Female, 11 to 14 years of age
  • Meet Tanner developmental stage criteria (as indicated by self-report and pictorial scales of breast and pubic hair development) for pubertal stages 3 or 4
  • Must be undergoing a healthy pubertal transition, pre-or-post menarche (within 15 months of menarche, with cycle irregularity)
  • Girls must be able to read at a 4th-grade reading level

Exclusion criteria

  • Current suicidal intent (based off Columbia-Suicide Severity rating scale)
  • A history or current diagnosis of bipolar disorder or psychosis
  • Currently on any prescription medications

Trial design

53 participants in 1 patient group

Mid-pubertal girls
Description:
Adolescent girls (ages 11-14) who are undergoing a healthy pubertal transition (Tanner developmental stage 3 or 4) will perform Trier Social Stress Test and Emotional go/no-go task.
Treatment:
Behavioral: Emotional go/no-go task
Behavioral: Trier Social Stress Test

Trial contacts and locations

1

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Data sourced from clinicaltrials.gov

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