Background: The dexamethasone suppression test (DST) is the main hormonal disturbance in psychotic depression compared to non-psychotic depression. However, although there have been many studies of individual hormonal axes in depression, few multi-axial studies have been reported. This study aims to examine hormonal differences between these groups of patients through three functional hormonal tests: DST, thyroid stimulating hormone response to thyroid releasing hormone (TSH-TRF) and growth hormone response to growth hormone releasing factor (GH-GRF).
Methods: Forty inpatients meeting DSM-III-R criteria for major depressive episode with melancholia (21 non-psychotic and 19 psychotic) were studied. Dexamethasone suppression test, TSH-TRF and GH-GRF tests were undertaken for all patients.
Results: In the whole melancholic sample, 80.0% showed disturbances in at least one hormonal axis, 40.0% in two axes and 5.0% in all three axes. Basal and post-dexamethasone cortisol levels were significantly higher in psychotic than in non-psychotic patients. An association between post-dexamethasone cortisol and blunted GH-GRF response was demonstrated in those with psychotic depression. In the whole sample, GH blunting was found in 62.5% of patients, DST non-suppression in 37.5% and TSH blunting in 25.0% (no differences were found between psychotic and non-psychotic patients).
Limitations: Sample was restricted to melancholia and unknown factors may influence hormonal responses to stress.
Conclusions: Hormonal disturbances in depression are more evident when studying several axes, being the HPA and the GH axes the most prominents. Psychotic depression showed more HPA disturbance than non-psychotic depression. Influence of the HPA on the GH axis is discussed.