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Psychiatrists鈥 Use of Biomarkers Could Open a New Window Into Mental Health Diagnoses

Amanda Miller was 30 and pregnant with her second child in Hershey, Pennsylvania, when she developed depression. After she gave birth, her depression worsened. It was joined by a slew of unexplained health problems.

Miller, a neuroscientist, said she saw several psychiatrists and got prescriptions for drug after drug. Over two years, she tried four antidepressants and two antipsychotics. None of that helped 鈥 until her primary care doctor noticed high levels of an autoimmune marker in her blood.

A specialist then ran 鈥渆very test in the book,鈥 Miller said. Eventually, she was diagnosed with the autoimmune disease lupus and prescribed an inflammation-lowering steroid. Some of her symptoms let up within hours. Her depression subsided not long after.

鈥淚 was convinced it was a placebo effect,鈥 Miller said, 鈥渂ut then it kept working.鈥

Had inflammation been contributing to her mental health problems all along? Miller thinks so, although she can鈥檛 know for sure. Her psychiatrists never raised that possibility, she said.

In most medical specialties, doctors can confirm whether to pursue a type of treatment through tests, such as blood work, imaging, and biopsies. Mental illnesses, however, have historically been diagnosed and treated based on outward symptoms. That could change.

The American Psychiatric Association included ideas for how it might incorporate biomarkers 鈥 biological indicators of mental illness that could show up on diagnostic tests 鈥 into future versions of its Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders.

The DSM, sometimes because of its influence in the field, provides criteria for diagnoses. It鈥檚 used by clinicians assessing patients and by insurance companies deciding whether to cover care.

鈥楥oordinated鈥 Research Needed

Psychiatric biomarkers are not ready for widespread use yet, the paper emphasized. Scientists have researched the topic for decades, with little to show for it. More research is needed to prove these metrics are valid and reliable enough to be used in patient care, the APA鈥檚 paper said, and other researchers have raised questions about how their use could affect health care costs, insurance coverage, and patient privacy.

Adding biomarkers to the DSM would be 鈥渁 very big deal,鈥 said Jonathan Alpert, an author of the January paper and vice chair of the APA鈥檚 Future DSM Strategic Committee.

Access to test results, along with symptoms, could streamline insurance coverage decisions and help clinicians make faster and more accurate diagnoses and treatment recommendations, he said. If patients鈥 biology suggested they鈥檇 respond better to one treatment than another, their doctor could waste no time in starting there.

Currently, prescribing psychiatric medications can be 鈥渁 bit of a crapshoot,鈥 with clinicians unable to predict whether they will work for a particular patient, said Matthew Eisenberg, director of the Center for Mental Health and Addiction Policy at the Johns Hopkins University Bloomberg School of Public Health.

In a funded by the National Institute of Mental Health, about 30% of the study鈥檚 participants with depression saw symptoms disappear with their first antidepressant treatment. That study is still one of the most robust antidepressant trials conducted 鈥 although researchers have that fewer people are cured by these medications than its results suggest.

Such a trial-and-error approach can lead to ineffective and unnecessary prescriptions, a topic of attack by proponents of the Make America Healthy Again movement, spearheaded by Health and Human Services Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. Kennedy has been especially , having linked them to violence after a without evidence and blaming doctors for overprescribing medications for children.

HHS is analyzing psychiatric diagnosis and prescription trends and evaluating alternative mental health treatment approaches, with a particular focus on children, spokesperson Emily Hilliard said in a statement. Hilliard did not respond to a question about Kennedy鈥檚 previous comments.

Biomarkers are already used to guide treatment in other medical disciplines, such as oncology. Arizona, Georgia, Kentucky, Texas, and require insurers to cover such testing. Blood and imaging tests are now used to help diagnose Alzheimer鈥檚 disease as well.

The APA included in its article a variety of ways psychiatric biomarkers could be used in the future 鈥 such as testing for brain activity, genetic profiles, or immune markers associated with certain psychiatric conditions, including schizophrenia and substance use disorders.

In depression, for example, about a quarter of patients have elevated levels of an inflammatory protein, called C-reactive protein, that can be found through a blood test. that people with high levels of this protein seem to respond better when given drugs that alter dopamine levels in the brain, rather than using only selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors, or SSRIs, a common type of antidepressant. C-reactive protein still needs to be 鈥渞obustly validated鈥 as a biomarker, according to the APA鈥檚 paper, but it鈥檚 among the most promising currently under investigation.

A 鈥渃oordinated, well-funded鈥 research effort is needed to achieve such validation, the APA wrote 鈥 a tenuous prospect since the Trump administration slashed funding for research.

The National Institute of Mental Health alone had at least 128 grants, worth almost $173 million, canceled in 2025, according to a . Though some grants have since been restored, researchers relying on federal money still fear their work is vulnerable to cuts.

鈥淭here鈥檚 a great need for continued, active funding of research related to mental health,鈥 Alpert said, but scientists will have to grapple with 鈥渦ncertainties of the funding landscape.鈥

Ripple Effects on Coverage, Costs

Health care costs among patients with poorly controlled mental illnesses, like hospital visits, outpatient appointments, and prescriptions. Some research suggests biomarker testing could save money by landing on the right treatments faster and avoiding some of these costs.

estimated that testing to look for genetic components that may influence a drug鈥檚 effectiveness could save the Canadian health system $956 million over 20 years if used among adults with major depression in British Columbia. , by Spanish researchers, found that such testing reduced costs for most of the 188 participants with serious mental illness.

Whether the same would be true in the U.S. health care system is unknown. In the short term, Johns Hopkins鈥 Eisenberg said, an approach that uses biomarkers could raise health care spending due to the costs of testing.

Insurers may decline to cover pricey biomarker tests, he added. 鈥淚t takes a while for new science to be proven safe and effective,鈥 Eisenberg said. 鈥淎nd once it is, insurance companies don鈥檛 cover it immediately.鈥

Some researchers have raised concerns that insurers or employers could discriminate against people whose聽biological profiles of developing serious neuropsychiatric conditions.

It鈥檚 a 鈥渃ritical moment鈥 to consider legislative approaches to protect patients and train clinicians about how to appropriately use these tools, said Gabriel L谩zaro-Mu帽oz, a member of Harvard Medical School鈥檚 Center for Bioethics.

鈥淚 do not think that the field of psychiatry is currently ready to manage this,鈥 he said.

The mental health system isn鈥檛 ready to 鈥渏ump in with both feet,鈥 said Andrew Miller, a professor of psychiatry and behavioral sciences at the Emory University School of Medicine, who studies inflammation-related depression. But the APA鈥檚 embrace of biomarkers signals 鈥渢he beginning of a revolution,鈥 he said.

鈥淭his is a recognition 鈥 that what we鈥檝e done up to this point has not been good enough,鈥 Miller said. 鈥淎nd we can do better.鈥

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