Relationship between major depressive disorder and myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: a two-sample mendelian randomization study analysis. — CFSMEATLAS
Relationship between major depressive disorder and myalgic encephalomyelitis/chronic fatigue syndrome: a two-sample mendelian randomization study analysis.
Song, Wenjing, Hou, Xinlei, Wu, Minmin et al. · Scientific reports · 2025 · DOI
Quick Summary
This study used genetic data from large databases to investigate whether depression causes ME/CFS, or vice versa. Researchers compared genetic information from thousands of people with depression and thousands with ME/CFS. They found no evidence that one condition genetically causes the other, even though depression and ME/CFS often happen together in the same person.
Why It Matters
Many ME/CFS patients experience depression, but it has been unclear whether one condition causes the other or whether they share common biological mechanisms. This study provides important genetic evidence that depression does not directly cause ME/CFS genetically, which could help clinicians and patients understand these conditions as distinct entities and inform treatment approaches.
Observed Findings
No significant causal relationship detected between MDD and ME/CFS in either direction using inverse-variance weighting and multiple sensitivity methods
No evidence of horizontal pleiotropy was detected between the genetic variants associated with MDD and ME/CFS
No heterogeneity was found among the genetic variants examined in the analysis
Leave-one-out sensitivity analysis confirmed the robustness and stability of the findings
Inferred Conclusions
MDD and ME/CFS do not have a direct genetic causal relationship, suggesting these conditions are genetically distinct entities
The frequent co-occurrence of MDD and ME/CFS is likely due to factors other than one condition genetically causing the other
Future research should focus on identifying shared environmental, immunological, or other non-genetic mechanisms that may explain the clinical association between these conditions
Remaining Questions
Why do MDD and ME/CFS co-occur so frequently if they are not genetically causally linked?
Are there shared environmental, immunological, or viral factors that predispose individuals to both conditions?
Could the association be bidirectional or mediated by a third factor not examined in this genetic analysis?
What This Study Does Not Prove
This study does not prove that depression and ME/CFS are completely unrelated—they may still share environmental triggers, immune factors, or other biological mechanisms not captured by genetic analysis. Mendelian randomization examines genetic causality specifically; it does not address whether psychological stress or depression symptoms could influence ME/CFS severity in individual patients. The absence of genetic causality does not explain why these conditions so frequently co-occur.