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Intern Health Study
Sponsor: University of Michigan
Summary
Retrospective studies have established a strong correlation between reports of life stress and depression. Investigators have begun to further explore this relationship by examining the role of gene x stress interactions in the pathogenesis of depression. In a recent landmark study, Caspi and colleagues (2003) reported an interaction between a serotonin transporter promoter polymorphism and life stress in the development of depression. This finding has been replicated in some but not all follow up studies. Despite the initial promise of these results, the ability to draw definitive conclusions is compromised by significant study design limitations: 1) retrospective design 2) a focus on acute rather than chronic stress 3) substantial variation in the character and intensity of stress between subjects. Medical internship is a period filled with predictable and high levels of chronic uncontrolled stress. Rates of depression among interns are elevated compared to the general population. In this study, we aim to utilize the predictable and consistent stress of internship to investigate the relationship between stress, genes and depression with a prospective study design that bypasses some of the pitfalls of previous studies.
Official title: Investigation Into the Interaction Between Genes and Stress in the Etiology of Depression in Interns
Key Details
Gender
All
Age Range
Any - Any
Study Type
OBSERVATIONAL
Enrollment
25000
Start Date
2007-05
Completion Date
2027-07
Last Updated
2025-07-01
Healthy Volunteers
Yes
Conditions
Locations (1)
University of Michigan Medical School
Ann Arbor, Michigan, United States