This is a slight tangent, but in the UK at least, much appears to be happening in terms of generating awareness of mental health, especially in men. This seems to be geared towards depression, and I have yet to see someone say that they destroyed their life rather than acknowledge a depression, but some articles come close.
David Baddeil, a well-known comic, writes on this; he says he has been in therapy for 10 years. He also wrote that his father suffers from depression, but wouldn't acknowledge it for anything, and acts towards others accordingly. That's the closest I've seen.
The awareness campaign seems to be focused on men committing suicide, which is said to be the biggest killer of young/early middle aged men now, rather than disease. That is obviously a very serious matter which needs to be addressed; there seems to be less focus on those who "simply" destroy lives.
I'm not at all saying that this constitutes research into the matter, just noting what I observe. Perhaps this is a tiny starting point.
It does point out that the stigma attached keeps people from coming forward; I haven't specifically seen something that says that men may blame everything else, though.
And I agree with kikki, the drug companies don't have a vested interest in funding studies that don't result in a need for a drug, so this side of things does get ignored.