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Identifying behaviour-related and physiological risk factors for suicide attempts in the UK Biobank

Author

Listed:
  • Bei Zhang

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Jia You

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Edmund T. Rolls

    (Fudan University
    Oxford Centre for Computational Neuroscience
    University of Warwick)

  • Xiang Wang

    (Central South University
    Central South University
    China National Clinical Research Centre on Mental Disorders (Xiangya))

  • Jujiao Kang

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Yuzhu Li

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Ruohan Zhang

    (University of Warwick)

  • Wei Zhang

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Huifu Wang

    (Qingdao University)

  • Shitong Xiang

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Chun Shen

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Yuchao Jiang

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Chao Xie

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education)

  • Jintai Yu

    (Fudan University)

  • Wei Cheng

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education
    Fudan University
    Zhejiang Normal University)

  • Jianfeng Feng

    (Fudan University
    Ministry of Education
    University of Warwick
    Fudan University)

Abstract

Suicide is a global public health challenge, yet considerable uncertainty remains regarding the associations of both behaviour-related and physiological factors with suicide attempts (SA). Here we first estimated polygenic risk scores (PRS) for SA in 334,706 UK Biobank participants and conducted phenome-wide association analyses considering 2,291 factors. We identified 246 (63.07%) behaviour-related and 200 (10.41%, encompassing neuroimaging, blood and metabolic biomarkers, and proteins) physiological factors significantly associated with SA-PRS, with robust associations observed in lifestyle factors and mental health. Further case–control analyses involving 3,558 SA cases and 149,976 controls mirrored behaviour-related associations observed with SA-PRS. Moreover, Mendelian randomization analyses supported a potential causal effect of liability to 58 factors on SA, such as age at first intercourse, neuroticism, smoking, overall health rating and depression. Notably, machine-learning classification models based on behaviour-related factors exhibited high discriminative accuracy in distinguishing those with and without SA (area under the receiver operating characteristic curve 0.909 ± 0.006). This study provides comprehensive insights into diverse risk factors for SA, shedding light on potential avenues for targeted prevention and intervention strategies.

Suggested Citation

  • Bei Zhang & Jia You & Edmund T. Rolls & Xiang Wang & Jujiao Kang & Yuzhu Li & Ruohan Zhang & Wei Zhang & Huifu Wang & Shitong Xiang & Chun Shen & Yuchao Jiang & Chao Xie & Jintai Yu & Wei Cheng & Jian, 2024. "Identifying behaviour-related and physiological risk factors for suicide attempts in the UK Biobank," Nature Human Behaviour, Nature, vol. 8(9), pages 1784-1797, September.
  • Handle: RePEc:nat:nathum:v:8:y:2024:i:9:d:10.1038_s41562-024-01903-x
    DOI: 10.1038/s41562-024-01903-x
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