Cigarette
Smoking, Suicidal Behavior, and Serotonin Function in Major Psychiatric
Disorders
OBJECTIVE:
Cigarette
smoking is associated with a higher risk for suicide and attempted suicide, but
psychopathological or biological explanations for this association have not
been explored.
Lower
serotonin function and impulsive/aggressive traits are associated with suicidal
acts, including completed suicide.
The
authors hypothesized that the relationship that may exist between cigarette
smoking and suicidal behavior may be associated with lower serotonin function
and the presence of impulsive/aggressive traits.
METHOD:
Study
subjects were 347 patients with a psychiatric disorder (175 with depression,
127 with schizophrenia, and 45 with other disorders).
Fifty-three
percent of the subjects (N=184) had a lifetime history of suicide attempt, and
47% (N=163) had never attempted suicide.
Smoking
behavior, lifetime suicidal behavior, and psychopathology were assessed.
Serotonin
function was assessed in a subgroup of patients with depression (N=162) by
using a fenfluramine challenge test and/or measurement of CSF levels of
5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid.
RESULTS:
Among
all patients, smokers were more likely to have made a suicide attempt (adjusted
odds ratio=2.60, 95% confidence interval=1.60–4.23) and had higher suicidal
ideation and lifetime aggression scores, compared with nonsmokers.
An
inverse relationship was observed between amount of cigarette smoking and both
indices of serotonin function.
CONCLUSIONS:
The
association between cigarette smoking and the presence and severity of suicidal
behavior across major psychiatric disorders may be related to lower brain
serotonin function in smokers with depression.
Further
investigation is required to replicate these findings, to measure serotonin
function in patients with disorders other than depression, and to test
potential therapeutic effects of serotonin-enhancing treatments on both smoking
behavior and suicide risk.
Epidemiologic
studies have reported an association between cigarette smoking and suicide of a
magnitude similar to that of the association between smoking and coronary heart
disease (1–7).
Prospective
studies have reported a similar association, including a dose-dependent
relationship between smoking and increased risk for suicide (8–11).
Relative
rates of suicide in smokers are elevated when adjusted for potential
confounding factors such as income, race, previous myocardial infarction,
diabetes, and alcohol intake.
An
association between smoking and suicidal ideation has also been reported for
psychiatric patients, among whom smokers had a 43% greater risk of experiencing
mild to severe suicidal ideation, compared with nonsmokers (8).
To
our knowledge, this association has no satisfactory explanation, other than the
observation that patients with psychiatric disorders are more likely to
smoke (12).
The
lack of an explanation led one group of researchers to dismiss the association
as an example of a chance finding generated in observational epidemiology (13).
However,
important biologic and psychopathologic explanatory factors may have been
overlooked.
Cigarette
smoking is associated with major depression, schizophrenia, and
alcoholism (14–19) (for
review see reference 20).
Successful
treatment of depression with fluoxetine, a selective serotonin reuptake
inhibitor, improves depressive symptoms (14) and
may improve the likelihood of smoking cessation (21),
perhaps by reducing the risk of developing a new episode of depression during
abstinence (22).
These
findings suggest a link between smoking, major depression, and serotonin
function.
Acute
administration of nicotine may result in release of serotonin as well as
dopamine (23),
whereas chronic nicotine administration to rats has been shown to decrease the
concentration and biosynthesis of serotonin (24, 25).
Consistent
with these results, one postmortem human study comparing smokers and nonsmokers
found that smokers had significantly lower concentrations of serotonin and the
serotonin metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid (5-HIAA) in the hippocampal
formation, a lower concentration of 5-HIAA in the median raphe, and higher
serotonin 1A (5-HT1A) receptor density (26).
Thus,
smoking may eventually impair serotonin function.
Altered
indices of brain serotonin function, including lower serotonin transporter
binding in the ventral prefrontal cortex and lower serotonin and/or 5-HIAA
levels in the brainstem, have been found in postmortem studies of suicide
completers, compared with subjects who died of other causes (27–29).
Serotonin
hypofunction, as indicated by a lower level of 5-HIAA in the CSF or a blunted
prolactin response to serotonergic challenge with fenfluramine, has been
reported in patients with major depression or schizophrenia and a history of
serious suicide attempt, compared with psychiatric patients without a history
of serious suicide attempt (30–32).
5000
Lower
levels of CSF 5-HIAA predicted future suicide or suicide attempts in patients
with mood disorders or schizophrenia (33, 34) and
may reflect a vulnerability or predisposition for suicidal behavior independent
of a specific psychiatric disorder.
We
hypothesized that among patients with major psychiatric disorder:
1)
cigarette smokers would be more likely to have a history of attempted suicide,
independent of psychiatric diagnosis;
2)
smoking would be associated with aggressive/impulsive traits;
3)
the amount of daily cigarette consumption would correlate with severity of
suicidal behavior (number and severity [lethality] of suicide attempts); and
4)
cigarette smoking would be associated with lower serotonin function in a
subgroup of depressed subjects for whom data on serotonin function were
available.
Method
Subjects
The
study subjects were recruited as inpatients as part of a longitudinal study on
the neurobiology of suicidal behavior conducted by the Conte Center for the
Neuroscience of Mental Disorders at New York State Psychiatric Institute in New
York City and previously at the Center for the Study of Suicidal Behavior at
the University of Pittsburgh Medical Center in Pittsburgh.
All
subjects were age 18–80 years; had an IQ >80; had a current DSM-III-R axis I
psychiatric disorder of major depressive episode, bipolar disorder (depressed),
dysthymia, schizophrenia or other psychotic disorder, or adjustment disorder,
with or without a comorbid axis II (personality disorder) diagnosis; were without
current substance abuse or alcohol dependence; and were free of all medication
and psychoactive substances for at least 2 weeks before entry into the study.
All
patients had a negative urine toxicology screen before biological testing.
The
required drug-free period was at least 3 weeks for tricyclic antidepressants, 4
weeks for oral antipsychotics, and 6 weeks for fluoxetine.
Women
who were pregnant were excluded, and phase of menstrual cycle was documented.
All
patients gave written informed consent for the protocol as approved by the
Institutional Review Board.
Clinical
Assessment
Subjects’
DSM-III-R axis I diagnoses were based on the Structured Clinical Interview for
DSM-III-R and were reviewed at a consensus conference involving two research
psychiatrists (K.M.M., J.J.M.).
Clinical
symptoms at index hospitalization/evaluation were rated by using the Brief
Psychiatric Rating Scale (BPRS) (35),
the Hamilton Depression Rating Scale (36),
the Beck Depression Inventory (37),
and the Beck Hopelessness Scale (38).
Lifetime
history of aggression was assessed with the Brown-Goodwin life history of aggression
interview (39, 40).
Assessment
of Suicide Attempts
A
lifetime history of all suicide attempts, including number of attempts and the
method and degree of medical damage for each attempt, was obtained.
A
lethality scale was used to measure the degree of medical damage caused by each
suicide attempt (41).
The
scale was scored from 0 to 8 (0=no medical damage, 8=death), with different
anchor points for various suicide attempt methods.
A
suicide attempt was defined as a self-destructive act that was committed with
some intent to end one’s life and that caused sufficient injury to require
medical evaluation.
The
degree of suicide intent was rated with the Suicide Intent Scale (42).
The Scale for Suicide Ideation (43) was
used to measure the severity of suicidal ideation during the week before the
index hospitalization.
Assessment
of Cigarette Smoking
Patients
were asked if they ever smoked cigarettes and, if they were presently smoking
cigarettes, how many cigarettes they smoked per day.
Smoking
status was scored as follows: nonsmoker (0 cigarettes/day), light smoker (1–20
cigarettes/day), moderate smoker (21–39 cigarettes/day), and heavy smoker (≥40
cigarettes/day).
Patients
did not smoke cigarettes for at least 12 hours before biological testing (as
biological testing was routinely performed at 8:00 a.m.).
Lifetime
duration of cigarette smoking was not documented, and former smokers were not
identified as such.
Indices
of Serotonin Function
Studies
of serotonin function were conducted in a subgroup of depressed patients
(N=162). Patients with schizophrenia were excluded from these analyses.
Fenfluramine
challenge test
The
method has been described in detail previously (44).
Patients fasted from midnight on the day of the test.
An
intravenous cannula was inserted into a forearm vein, and an infusion of 5%
dextrose and N/5 saline was begun.
The
dextrose was administered to reduce the effects of fasting-induced
hypoglycemia, including its potential effect on prolactin response.
The
patients were given about 1 hour to become accustomed to the intravenous
infusion and the testing environment. During the procedure, they remained awake
while seated or in a supine position.
At
about 8:45 a.m. and 9:00 a.m., blood was drawn for assay of plasma prolactin.
At 9:00 a.m., 60 mg of d, l-fenfluramine was given orally, and blood was
drawn hourly thereafter for 5 hours for measurement of plasma prolactin, as
well as plasma levels of fenfluramine and norfenfluramine.
Plasma
prolactin and cortisol levels were determined by radioimmunometric assay, as
previously described (44).
The
sensitivity of the procedure was improved to 1 ng/ml by using a sequential 37°C
incubation of reagents.
Patients
whose duplicate measurements had a coefficient of variation exceeding 5% were
retested.
The
range for intraassay variation of individual patients’ samples over the study
was 1.08% to 2.86% (mean=1.96%).
Plasma
levels of fenfluramine and norfenfluramine were measured by a gas-liquid
chromatographic method (44).
The
minimum detectable concentrations of fenfluramine and norfenfluramine were 2.0
ng/ml and 5.0 ng/ml, respectively.
The
outcome measure was the net maximal change in prolactin level, defined as the
difference between the baseline prolactin level (the mean of the two
prefenfluramine levels) and the highest postfenfluramine level.
Lumbar
puncture and CSF 5-HIAA measurement
The
lumbar puncture was performed at about 8:00 a.m., after the patient had been
restricted to bed rest overnight and had fasted since midnight.
CSF
was drawn from the interspace between the third and fourth lumbar vertebrae
while the patient was in the left decubitus position.
After
the removal of 1 ml of CSF, a further 15 ml of CSF was removed and immediately
transferred on ice water to be centrifuged at 4°C and aliquoted into 1-ml
samples for storage at –70°C until assay.
The
CSF 5-HIAA was assayed by high-performance liquid chromatography with
electrochemical detection modified from the method described by Scheinin et al.
(45).
The
within-run and between-run coefficients of variation of the assay method were
less than 10%.
The
level of sensitivity of the assay for 5-HIAA was 0.5 pmol per injection.
Assays
were done by laboratory staff who were blind to the clinical data.
Statistical
Analysis
We
examined the association between lifetime history of suicide attempt and
cigarette smoking (yes/no) using crude and adjusted odds ratios computed with
logistic regression (95% confidence intervals).
Multivariate
initial statistical analyses tested a priori hypotheses.
For
example, analysis of variance (ANOVA) and logistic regression models controlled
for the effects of severity of depression and comorbid alcohol abuse on the
association between suicide attempt and smoking.
Spearman
rank correlations were used to examine the relationships between 1) degree of
smoking and degree of medical damage resulting from the most medically damaging
suicide attempt and 2) degree of smoking and both the level of 5-HIAA in CSF
and the prolactin response to fenfluramine.
With
CSF 5-HIAA or net maximal change in prolactin levels as the dependent variable,
the ANOVA and regression analyses controlled for the effects of potentially
confounding demographic and clinical variables on smoking behavior.
The
potentially confounding variables included age, sex, race, DSM-III-R axis I
diagnosis, severity of depression, and past alcohol and substance abuse.
Results
Patient
Characteristics
The
study group consisted of 347 patients with an axis I psychiatric disorder (177
male subjects and 170 female subjects), including 184 patients (53%) who had
made at least one previous suicide attempt.
Eighty-nine
patients (26%) had a lumbar puncture and CSF 5-HIAA assay, and 143 patients
(41%) underwent a fenfluramine challenge test.
Fifty-six
patients underwent both biological procedures.
All
162 patients who underwent serotonin function testing had a depressive disorder
(major depressive episode, bipolar disorder [depressed], or dysthymia).
Ninety-nine
of the 162 patients (61%) had a lifetime history of suicide attempt.
The
demographic and clinical characteristics of the overall study group are
summarized in Table
1.
Smoking
Patterns in Suicide Attempters Versus Nonattempters
Cigarette
smoking was similarly prevalent in the groups with schizophrenia (N=70 of 122
patients, 57%) and depression (N=90 of 170 patients, 53%).
Proportionally
more patients with other diagnoses smoked (N=33 of 45 patients, 73%).
(This
category included patients with a past history of alcohol or substance abuse.)
Smoking
was more common among suicide attempters (N=125 of 181, 69%) than among
patients who had not made a suicide attempt (N=68 of 156, 44%) (χ2=22.2, df=1,
p=0.001) (Data on smoking were available for 337 patients.)
The
association between smoking and suicide attempt status (Table
2) was significant after the analysis controlled for the effects of
1)
demographic characteristics such as age, sex, and race;
2)
DSM-III-R axis I psychopathology; and
3)
clinical features such as severity of depression (Hamilton depression scale
score), severity of psychiatric symptoms (BPRS score), past history of alcohol
or substance abuse, and aggression scores (Table
3).
In
the overall study group, the likelihood of being a suicide attempter was
correlated with the amount of smoking (number of cigarettes smoked per day) (rs=0.24,
N=337, p=0.0001).
A
linear relationship was not found between the lethality of the most medically
damaging lifetime suicide attempt and amount of smoking in the overall study
group, but such a relationship was found for male patients (r=0.22, N=91,
p=0.03).
Cigarette
Smoking and Indices of Serotonin Function
Biological
assessments (measurement of level of 5-HIAA in CSF and the fenfluramine
challenge) were completed for a subgroup of depressed patients (N=162).
This
subgroup did not differ from the patients who did not have biological assays on
demographic variables such as race, age, or marital status.
However,
Hamilton depression scores were predictably higher in the group who underwent
the biological assessments (mean=27.4, SD=9.56, versus mean=23.8, SD=10.6)
(t=3.29, df=333, p<0.001), as was the level of suicidal ideation (Scale for
Suicide Ideation score: mean=16.9, SD=11.2, versus mean=8.3, SD=11.6) (t=6.73,
df=313, p<0.001).
CSF
5-HIAA and cigarette smoking in depressed subjects
CSF
5-HIAA level was negatively correlated with the amount of cigarette smoking (rs=–0.32,
N=88, p<0.003) (Figure
1 and Table
4).
Moreover,
a regression analysis that controlled for key clinical variables confirmed a
significant adjusted effect of amount of smoking on CSF 5-HIAA level (t=–2.89,
residual df=78, p<0.005, N=86).
This
analysis showed that age also contributed weakly as a predictor of CSF 5-HIAA
level (t=–1.68, residual df=78, p<0.10).
The
CSF 5-HIAA level did not predict suicide attempter status (CSF 5-HIAA level:
mean=93.7, SD=34.4 for attempters; mean=94.4, SD=42.1 for nonattempters)
(t=0.09, df=87, p<0.93). Aggression scores contributed significantly to the
model (Table
4).
Fenfluramine
challenge test and cigarette smoking in depressed subjects
The
maximum prolactin response to fenfluramine above baseline prolactin was used as
the measure of outcome of the fenfluramine challenge test in the depressed
subgroup.
As
with CSF 5-HIAA level, the maximum prolactin response to fenfluramine
correlated inversely with the amount of cigarette smoking (rs=–0.30, N=143,
p=0.0002) (Table
4, Figure
2).
The
association between the maximum prolactin response to fenfluramine and the
amount of smoking remained statistically significant in a linear regression
analysis that controlled for the effects of age, sex, severity of depression, aggression,
past history of alcohol or substance abuse, and current BPRS scores (F=4.78,
df=7, 128, p<0.001, adjusted t=–2.95, residual df=128, adjusted p=0.003).
Smoking
status (yes/no) was similarly associated with the maximum prolactin response to
fenfluramine above baseline after the effects of these demographic and clinical
variables were controlled.
Supplementary
analyses that used data for only those subjects with major depressive episode
(excluding those with depressed symptoms but not major depressive episode) did
not significantly alter the inverse correlations between number of cigarettes
smoked per day and either CSF 5-HIAA level (rs=–0.31, N=55, p<0.02) or
maximum prolactin response to fenfluramine above baseline prolactin (rs=–0.25,
N=120, p<0.006).
Cigarette
smoking and cortisol
We
examined for possible stress effects and found no difference in baseline
cortisol level (ng/ml) between nonsmokers and smokers in the group that
underwent fenfluramine challenge (nonsmokers: N=82, mean=12.44, SD=4.9;
smokers: N=64, mean=12.93, SD=5.4) (t=–0.57, df=144, p=0.57).
Discussion
This
study extends previous findings (1–3, 8) by
demonstrating that the seriousness of suicidal behavior is correlated with the
amount of smoking, after the effects of axis I psychiatric diagnosis are
controlled (14–17, 19, 20).
Our
results also extend previous epidemiologic findings (14–17, 19, 20) by
demonstrating that the association between cigarette smoking and the presence
and severity of suicidal behavior is not confined to a specific psychiatric
disorder.
To
our knowledge, this study is the first to report a correlation between
cigarette smoking and impaired serotonin function (as measured by CSF 5-HIAA
level and prolactin response to fenfluramine) in depressed patients in vivo.
Serotonergic hypofunction appears to be related to more lethal suicidal
behavior in several major psychiatric disorders (30–32, 46).
Moreover,
severity of suicidal behavior and lifetime aggression are related to level of
serotonergic function (39, 40).
Our results suggest that lower serotonin function and smoking are also
associated in depressed patients.
Thus,
lower serotonergic function may be related to cigarette smoking, suicidal
behavior, and aggressive behaviors.
An
association between impaired serotonergic function and smoking or between
suicidal behavior and smoking does not imply causality.
Nicotine
may have both biological and behavioral effects in the brain that increase the
probability of suicidal behavior in depressed patients.
Alternatively,
low serotonin function may predispose the patient with psychiatric disorder to
both smoking and to suicidal acts.
Finally,
both mechanisms could combine to increase the risk for suicidal behavior.
Low
serotonin function could increase the probability of developing a smoking
habit, and, after the onset of a depressive disorder, further depletion of
serotonin by smoking may heighten the risk for suicidal acts.
Acute
nicotine administration has been shown to promote serotonin release (47),
whereas chronic nicotine administration results in serotonin depletion in brain
areas such as the hippocampal formation and reduces firing of serotonergic
neurons arising in the midbrain raphe (48).
These
effects may trigger depression and enhance the predisposition to suicidal
behavior.
A
lower serotonin level brought about by acute tryptophan depletion in patients
with a past history of depression can trigger depression and, depending on
preexisting traits and temperament, can increase aggressive and impulsive
behaviors (49–51).
Lower
serotonin function has previously been reported in primates and humans with
higher levels of impulsive, novelty-seeking behavior (52–54).
It
is possible that lower serotonin turnover in the brain may render the subject
more susceptible to the serotonin-lowering effects of nicotine and thus may
enhance suicidal behavior during depression by reducing the restraining
influences exerted over unwanted suicidal thoughts mediated through central
serotonin pathways (55).
Smokers
in our study had higher aggression scores than nonsmokers, consistent with this
biological hypothesis.
There
may be a common factor predisposing individuals to smoking and suicidal
behavior that is manifested in a variety of psychiatric disorders.
In
this study, both lifetime aggression scores and current suicidal ideation
scores were significantly higher in smokers, suggesting a common diathesis.
Higher
levels of lifetime aggression reported to be associated with both substance
abuse and suicidal behavior may also reflect this common diathesis (56).
A
predisposition to both major depression and cigarette smoking has been proposed
on the basis of findings from twin studies suggesting that the relationship
between lifetime smoking and depression resulted “solely from genes that
predispose to both conditions” (57).
Rates
of suicidal behavior were not reported in that study.
Serotonergic
function, aggression, and suicidal behavior also have genetic causal factors.
Thus,
further research is required to identify the disease-susceptibility genes
associated with smoking, aggression, and suicidal behavior and to determine
whether low serotonin function is a common predisposing factor with a genetic
basis.
Our
study had some limitations.
We
did not document the lifetime duration or age at onset of smoking or the
history of ex-smokers.
We
did not study serotonin function and smoking in the diagnostic groups without
depression.
We
did not find a relationship between either measure of serotonin function and
history of suicide attempt in the subgroup we studied.
That
result was consistent with our previous reports, in which low serotonin
function was detected only in patients who had made suicide attempts with a
high level of lethality and was negatively correlated with lifetime severity of
aggressive behaviors (30–32).
In
conclusion, our study suggests a biological explanation for a relationship
between suicidal behavior and smoking. Enhancement of serotonergic function may
reduce suicide risk and assist smoking cessation.
TABLE
1
TABLE
2
TABLE
3
TABLE
4
Received
Aug. 13, 2001; revision received Nov. 15, 2002; accepted Nov. 21, 2002.
From
the Division of Neuroscience, Department of Psychiatry, College of Physicians
and Surgeons of Columbia University, New York; Department of Adult Psychiatry,
University College Dublin, Dublin, Ireland; and Western Psychiatric Institute
and Clinic, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, Pittsburgh.
Address
reprint requests to Dr. Malone, Department of Psychiatry and Mental Health
Research, Conway Institute for Biomolecular & Biomedical Research,
University College Dublin, and Dublin Molecular Medicine Centre (DMMC), St.
Vincent’s University Hospital, Elm Park, Dublin 4, Ireland; kmalone@st-vincents.ie (e-mail).
Supported
by NIMH grants MH-46745, MH-48514, and MH-62185; NIH grant RR-00645; and a
Young Investigator Award to Dr. Malone from the National Alliance for Research
on Schizophrenia and Depression.
The
authors thank Donna Abbondanza, R.N., for assistance with the biological
procedures, Thomas Kelly, M.S.W., and Diane Dolata, R.N., for assistance in the
clinical assessments, and Steven Ellis, Ph.D., for statistical assistance.
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