Translational Psychiatry (Jan 2025)
On the pursuit of reproducibility: the importance of large sample sizes in psychoimmunology
Abstract
Abstract Peripheral inflammatory markers (PIMs), such as C-reactive protein (CRP) or white blood cell count (WBC), have been associated with depression severity in meta-analyses and large cohort studies. However, in typically-sized psychoimmunology studies (N 500) generally ensured the correct directionality of effect sizes (e.g., low rates of sign reversal). Sample sizes required for 80% power also varied widely depending on study design characteristics (e.g., N = 350 to N = 10,000+). Typically-sized psychoimmunology studies examining PIM-depression associations (N 7000) and consideration of analytic decisions (e.g., number/choice of covariates) will maximize reproducibility of psychoimmunology studies related to depression to enhance development of treatments for depression or to help understand pathophysiological mechanisms of depression.