Unraveling the Associations Between Voice Pitch and Major Depressive Disorder: A Multisite Genetic Study

Publication date: Oct 12, 2024

Major depressive disorder (MDD) often goes undiagnosed due to the absence of clear biomarkers. We sought to identify voice biomarkers for MDD and separate biomarkers indicative of MDD predisposition from biomarkers reflecting current depressive symptoms. Using a two-stage meta-analytic design to remove confounds, we tested the association between features representing vocal pitch and MDD in a multisite case-control cohort study of Chinese women with recurrent depression. Sixteen features were replicated in an independent cohort, with absolute association coefficients (beta values) from the combined analysis ranging from 0.24 to 1.07, indicating moderate to large effects. The statistical significance of these associations remained robust, with P-values ranging from 7.2×10^(-6) to 6.8×10^(-58). Eleven features were significantly associated with current depressive symptoms. Using genotype data, we found that this association was driven in part by a genetic correlation with MDD. Significant voice features, reflecting a slower pitch change and a lower pitch, achieved an AUC-ROC of 0.90 (sensitivity of 0.85 and specificity of 0.81) in MDD classification. Our results return vocal features to a more central position in clinical and research work on MDD.

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Concepts Keywords
China Angeles
Intonation4142 Biomarkers
Psychiatry Certified
Underpowered Depression
Depressive
Genetic
Los
Mdd
Medrxiv
Peer
Pitch
Preprint
Speech
Table
Voice

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH Major Depressive Disorder
disease MESH depressive symptoms
drug DRUGBANK Saquinavir
disease MESH melancholia

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