logo
ResearchBunny Logo
Patterns of activity correlate with symptom severity in major depressive disorder patients

Psychology

Patterns of activity correlate with symptom severity in major depressive disorder patients

S. Spulber, F. Elberling, et al.

This study explores the intriguing link between activity patterns and depression symptom severity in patients with major depressive disorder not on antidepressants. The research, conducted by S. Spulber, F. Elberling, J. Svensson, M. Tiger, S. Ceccatelli, and J. Lundberg, unveils that higher depression severity is tied to simpler activity patterns and a stronger reliance on external factors, highlighting actigraphy's potential in evaluating MDD patients.

00:00
00:00
~3 min • Beginner • English
Abstract
Objective measures, such as activity monitoring, can potentially complement clinical assessment for psychiatric patients. Alterations in rest-activity patterns are commonly encountered in patients with major depressive disorder. The aim of this study was to investigate whether features of activity patterns correlate with severity of depression symptoms (evaluated by Montgomery-Åsberg Rating Scale (MADRS) for depression). We used actigraphy recordings collected during ongoing major depressive episodes from patients not undergoing any antidepressant treatment. The recordings were acquired from two independent studies using different actigraphy systems. Data was quality-controlled and pre-processed for feature extraction following uniform procedures. We trained multiple regression models to predict MADRS score from features of activity patterns using brute-force and semi-supervised machine learning algorithms. The models were filtered based on the precision and the accuracy of fitting on training dataset before undergoing external validation on an independent dataset. The features enriched in the models surviving external validation point to high depressive symptom severity being associated with less complex activity patterns and stronger coupling to external circadian entrainers. Our results bring proof-of-concept evidence that activity patterns correlate with severity of depressive symptoms and suggest that actigraphy recordings may be a useful tool for individual evaluation of patients with major depressive disorder.
Publisher
Translational Psychiatry
Published On
Jun 02, 2022
Authors
S. Spulber, F. Elberling, J. Svensson, M. Tiger, S. Ceccatelli, J. Lundberg
Tags
Major Depressive Disorder
Activity Patterns
Depression Symptoms
Actigraphy
Circadian Entrainment
Listen, Learn & Level Up
Over 10,000 hours of research content in 25+ fields, available in 12+ languages.
No more digging through PDFs, just hit play and absorb the world's latest research in your language, on your time.
listen to research audio papers with researchbunny