Background: Prenatal and postnatal depression potentially have severe consequences, but we do not know to what extent they have the same etiological factors. Genetically informative designs yield insight into common etiology between pre- and postnatal depression and inform on potential prevention and intervention efforts. This study evaluates the overlap in genetic and environmental factors in pre- and postnatal depression symptoms.

Methods: We conducted univariate and bivariate modeling, using a quantitative, extended twin study. The sample was a subsample of the MoBa prospective pregnancy cohort study in 6039 pairs of related women. Measurement was conducted at week 30 of pregnancy and 6 months following delivery, using a self-report scale.

Results: The heritability of depressive symptoms was 16.2 % (95 % CI = 10.7-22.1) prenatally and 25.7 % (95 % CI = 19.2-32.2) postnatally. The correlation between risk factors for prenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms was at unity (r = 1.00) for genetic effects, and at disunity (r = 0.36) for environmental effects. The genetic effects for postnatal depressive symptoms were 1.7 times larger compared to prenatal depressive symptoms.

Limitations: Although genes for depression become more influential postpartum, only future studies can inform on the mechanisms for such a socio-biological augmentation of effect.

Conclusion: Genetic risk factors for prenatal and postnatal depressive symptoms are indistinguishable in kind, with greater impact after birth, whereas environmental risk factors for depression symptoms are mostly non-overlapping before and after birth. These findings indicate that interventions could be of different kind before and after birth.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jad.2023.04.135DOI Listing

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