The revised application is in response to PA-06-543, """"""""Mechanisms, Models, Measurement, &Management in Pain Research (R03)."""""""" Consistent with this program announcement, we aim to test hypotheses about the developmental pathways to comorbid pain and depressive disorders in females. Clinically significant pain disorders are markedly more common in individuals with depression, particularly in females who are more likely to experience both pain and depression from adolescence on. This is an issue of considerable public health significance, as depressed individuals who experience high levels of pain experience marked distress and functional impairment and are frequent consumers of medical services.
Aims :
The specific aims for this application are to address the following questions: 1) Are individual differences in behavioral and biological response to a pain stressor concurrently associated with depression and impairment at ages 10 and 12 and does this association grow stronger as puberty progresses;2) Do specific patterns of behavioral and biological response to a pain stressor explain variance in depression and functional impairment at ages 10 and 12;and 3) Are individual differences in response to a pain stressor at ages 10 and 12 prospectively associated with individual differences in depression and impairment at ages 11 and 13, after controlling for depression and impairment at ages 10 and 12? Approach: In the context of a longitudinal study currently funded by NIMH, Preadolescence precursors to depression in girls (R01 MH66167), 232 nine-year old girls are being assessed annually for a period of 5 years. Data are collected from both the girls and their mothers. We have embedded a pain stimulus into the longitudinal study, the cold pressor task (CPT), which was administered at age 10 and is planned for administration at age 12. We have collected saliva in response to the CPT age 10 and plan to collect samples again at age 12. There are no funds for assaying cortisol from the saliva or for conducting analyses on pain response in the parent R01. The purpose of this application for an R03 is to secure funding for testing hypotheses about the developmental phenomenology of comorbid pain and depression in females, an aim that was not included in the parent R01 study. Innovation: This will be the first study to explore the developmental interface between pain and depression using behavioral and biological responses to a controlled pain stimulus and clinically meaningful measures of depressive symptoms beginning in childhood.

Public Health Relevance

Clinically significant pain disorders are much more common in individuals with depression, particularly in females who are more likely to experience both pain and depression from adolescence on. Given the impact of co-occurring pain and depression on public health for females especially, probing the developmental unfolding of the relations between depression and pain in girls is an important area of research. This will be the first study to explore the developmental interface between pain and depression using behavioral and biological responses to a controlled pain stimulus and clinically meaningful measures of depressive symptoms beginning in childhood.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Small Research Grants (R03)
Project #
1R03MH084073-01A1
Application #
7658508
Study Section
Biobehavioral Mechanisms of Emotion, Stress and Health Study Section (MESH)
Program Officer
Muehrer, Peter R
Project Start
2009-05-01
Project End
2011-04-30
Budget Start
2009-05-01
Budget End
2010-04-30
Support Year
1
Fiscal Year
2009
Total Cost
$74,930
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Chicago
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
005421136
City
Chicago
State
IL
Country
United States
Zip Code
60637
Keenan, Kate; Hipwell, Alison; Babinski, Dara et al. (2013) Examining the developmental interface of cortisol and depression symptoms in young adolescent girls. Psychoneuroendocrinology 38:2291-9
Keenan, Kate; Hipwell, Alison; Chung, Tammy et al. (2010) The Pittsburgh Girls Study: overview and initial findings. J Clin Child Adolesc Psychol 39:506-21
Keenan, Kate; Hipwell, Alison E; Hinze, Amanda E et al. (2009) The association of pain and depression in preadolescent girls: moderation by race and pubertal stage. J Pediatr Psychol 34:727-37