Researchers identify biomarkers for possible blood test to predict suicide risk

Indiana University School of Medicine researchers have found a series of RNA biomarkers in blood that may help identify who is at risk for committing suicide.

The researchers said the biomarkers were found at significantly higher levels in the blood of both bipolar disorder patients with thoughts of suicide as well in a group of people who had committed suicide.

Principal investigator Alexander B. Niculescu III, M.D., Ph.D., associate professor of psychiatry and medical neuroscience at the IU School of Medicine and attending psychiatrist and research and development investigator at the Richard L. Roudebush Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Indianapolis, said he believes the results provide a first ‘proof of principle’ for a test that could provide an early warning of somebody being at higher risk for an impulsive suicide act.

‘Suicide is a big problem in psychiatry. It’s a big problem in the civilian realm, it’s a big problem in the military realm and there are no objective markers,’ said Dr. Niculescu, director of the Laboratory of Neurophenomics at the Institute of Psychiatric Research at the IU School of Medicine.

‘There are people who will not reveal they are having suicidal thoughts when you ask them, who then commit it and there’s nothing you can do about it. We need better ways to identify, intervene and prevent these tragic cases,’ he said.

Over a three-year period, Niculescu and his colleagues followed a large group of patients diagnosed with bipolar disorder, completing interviews and taking blood samples every three to six months. The researchers conducted a variety of analyses of the blood of a subset of participants who reported a dramatic shift from no suicidal thoughts to strong suicidal ideation. They identified differences in gene expression between the ‘low’ and ‘high’ states of suicidal thoughts and subjected those findings to a system of genetic and genomic analysis called Convergent Functional Genomics that identified and prioritized the best markers by cross-validation with other lines of evidence.

The researchers found that the marker SAT1 and a series of other markers provided the strongest biological ‘signal’ associated with suicidal thoughts.

Next, to validate their findings, working with the local coroner’s office, they analysed blood samples from suicide victims and found that some of same top markers were significantly elevated.

Finally, the researchers analysed blood test results from two additional groups of patients and found that high blood levels of the biomarkers were correlated with future suicide-related hospitalisations, as well as hospitalisations that had occurred before the blood tests.

‘This suggests that these markers reflect more than just a current state of high risk, but could be trait markers that correlate with long term risk,’ said Dr. Niculescu.

Although confident in the biomarkers validity, Dr. Niculescu noted that a limitation is that the research subjects were all male.

‘There could be gender differences,’ he said. ‘We would also like to conduct more extensive, normative studies, in the population at large.’

In addition to extending the research to females to see if the same or other markers come into play, Dr. Niculescu and colleagues plan to conduct research among other groups, such as persons who have less impulsive, more deliberate and planned subtypes of suicide. Indiana University School of Medicine