Abstract
Masculine depression is characterized by externalizing symptoms, including anger, aggression, substance use, and risk-seeking behavior. However, the understanding of its clinical presentation remains highly limited. Here, we tested mental health burden in patients with high masculine depression scores in a case-control study of 163 depressed in-patients (44% women and 56% men; high vs. low masculine depression scores according to a sex-separated median split of the Male Depression Risk Scale-22 [MDRS-22]) and 176 controls (51% women and 49% men). In models adjusted for depression severity, the group of patients with a high masculine depression score (compared to those with a low score) was related to a greater acute mental health burden as measured by the Symptom Checklist-90-Revised (SCL-90-R). This association was evident across the three global indices of the SCL-90-R. Moreover, the dimensions somatization, anger-hostility, paranoid ideation, and psychoticism were associated with the group of patients with high masculine depression scores relative to the group of patients with low masculine depression scores as well as to higher MDRS-22 scores. Here, we provide evidence that patients with high masculine depression scores experience a substantial mental health burden – regardless of their biological sex. This is important, as patients with masculine depression were shown to be undertreated. Trial registration German Clinical Trials Register ID DRKS00015291, Registration Date 2020-01-06. SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1038/s41598-026-44727-7.