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abstractpubmed· Abstract 2021· item PMID:34800610

Gut-derived systemic inflammation as a driver of depression in chronic liver disease. Depression and chronic liver disease (CLD) are important causes of disability, morbidity and mortality worldwide and their prevalence continues to rise. The rate of depression in CLD is high compared to that of the general population and is comparable to the increased rates observed in other medical comorbidities and chronic inflammatory conditions. Notably, a comorbid diagnosis of depression has a detrimental effect on outcomes in cirrhosis. Systemic inflammation is pivotal in cirrhosis-associated immune dysfunction - a phenomenon present in advanced CLD (cirrhosis) and implicated in the development of complications, organ failure, disease progression, increased infection rates and poor outcome. The presence of systemic inflammation is also well documented in a cohort of depressed patients; peripheral cytokine signals can result in neuroinflammation, behavioural change and depressive symptoms via neural mechanisms, cerebral endothelial cell and circumventricular organ signaling, and peripheral immune cell-to-brain signaling. Gut dysbiosis has been observed in both depressed and cirrhotic patients. It leads to intestinal barrier dysfunction resulting in increased bacterial translocation, in turn activating circulating immune cells, leading to cytokine production and systemic inflammation. A perturbed gut-liver-brain axis may therefore explain the high rates of depression in patients with cirrhosis. The underlying mechanisms explaining the critical relationship between depression and cirrhosis remain to be fully elucidated. Several other psychosocial and biological factors are likely to be involved, and therefore the cause is probably multifactorial. However, the role of the dysfunctional gut-liver-brain axis as a driver of gut-derived systemic inflammation requires further exploration and consideration as a target for therapy for depression in patients with cirrhosis.