Osteocalcin: A novel biomarker of adolescent psychopathology
- PMID: 39084059
- DOI: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2024.107136
Osteocalcin: A novel biomarker of adolescent psychopathology
Abstract
Osteocalcin is a bone-derived hormone implicated in the acute stress response and recently linked to adult depression. Yet it is unclear whether osteocalcin is a biomarker of other forms of psychopathology and whether osteocalcin-psychopathology associations emerge during developmentally sensitive periods earlier in life. Thus, in the current pilot study we examined salivary osteocalcin and psychiatric symptoms and disorders among 48 early adolescents during a period of stress. A logistic regression indicated lower osteocalcin was associated with meeting criteria for a psychiatric disorder, OR = 0.43, 95 % CI [.002,.924], and showed moderate-to-large cross-sectional associations with a range of elevated psychopathology symptoms, Bs ≥ |-3.44|, ps ≤.034. Multilevel linear growth models indicated that low osteocalcin prospectively predicted an even greater range of psychopathology symptoms at one-year follow-up as well as increases in some symptoms over time, Bs ≥ |-1.83|, ps ≤.021. Findings introduce osteocalcin as a biomarker of diverse forms of psychopathology in youth. Osteocalcin is a potential transdiagnostic mechanism through which dysregulated responses to stress could cause or exacerbate various types of psychopathology, highlighting a promising target for clinical assessment and early intervention.
Keywords: Adolescence; Mental Disorders; Osteocalcin; Psychiatric Disorders; Psychopathology.
Copyright © 2024 The Authors. Published by Elsevier Ltd.. All rights reserved.
Conflict of interest statement
Declaration of Competing Interest none The preregistration for this study is available at: https://aspredicted.org/VNG_FD9. Data and code are available on the Open Science Framework at: https://osf.io/ygjc6/?view_only=abcad4b27a614969b7a593926396e5ab.
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