Somatic, positive and negative domains of the Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale: a meta-analysis of genome-wide association studies
Date
2016Author
Zhuang, W. V.
Sutin, A.
Meirelles, O.
Mulas, A.
Hofman, A.
Uitterlinden, A.
Rivadeneira, F.
Perola, M.
Zhao, W.
Salomaa, V.
Yaffe, K.
Luik, A. I.
Liu, Y.
Ding, J.
Lichtenstein, P.
Landen, M.
Widen, E.
Weir, D. R.
Llewellyn, D. J.
Murray, A.
Kardia, S. L. R.
Eriksson, J. G.
Koenen, K.
Magnusson, P. K. E.
Ferrucci, L.
Mosley, T. H.
Cucca, F.
Oostra, B. A.
Bennett, D. A.
Paunio, T.
Berger, K.
Harris, T. B.
Pedersen, N. L.
Murabito, J. M.
Tiemeier, H.
van Duijn, C. M.
Raeikkoenen, K.
Direk, Neşe
Demirkan, A.
Lahti, J.
Viktorin, A.
Lunetta, K. L.
Terracciano, A.
Nalls, M. A.
Tanaka, T.
Hek, K.
Fornage, M.
Wellmann, J.
Cornelis, M. C.
Ollila, H. M.
Yu, L.
Smith, J. A.
Pilling, L. C.
Isaacs, A.
Palotie, A.
Zonderman, A.
Faul, J. D.
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
Background. Major depressive disorder (MDD) is moderately heritable, however genome-wide association studies (GWAS) for MDD, as well as for related continuous outcomes, have not shown consistent results. Attempts to elucidate the genetic basis of MDD may be hindered by heterogeneity in diagnosis. The Center for Epidemiological Studies Depression (CES-D) scale provides a widely used tool for measuring depressive symptoms clustered in four different domains which can be combined together into a total score but also can be analysed as separate symptom domains.
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