Basal and post-dexamethasone cortisol and prolactin concentrations in depressed and non-depressed patients with chronic pain syndromes

Abstract
To assess the behavior of two putative neuroendocrine markers of depression in chronic pain, the authors determined plasma cortisol and prolactin concentrations before and after dexamethasone in 52 hospitalized male chronic pain patients. Their psychiatric diagnoses by Research Diagnostic Criteria (RDC) were: major depression (N = 24; 44.2%), minor depression (N = 10; 19.2%), another RDC diagnosis (N = 7; 13.5%) and not mentally ill (N = 12; 21.6%). Failure to suppress cortisol after dexamethasone (a positive DST) occurred in 43.5% of those with major depression, 20% of those with minor depression, 42.8% of those with other psychiatric diagnoses and in 8.3% of patients without a psychiatric disorder. The frequency of non-suppression was significantly different only for patients with major depression compared to those without diagnosable psychiatric disorder. Mean basal cortisol concentrations at 08.00, 16.00 and 23.00 h did not differ among psychiatric diagnostic groups of pain patients, or between these groups and healthy volunteers. Levels of prolactin, but not cortisol, were significantly correlated with the severity of mood disturbances. These findings suggest strategies using multiple endocrine markers to distinguish pain from depression should be explored.