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      The Association between familial risk and brain abnormalities Is disease specific: an ENIGMA-relatives study of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder

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      Author(s)
      Zwarte, S. M. C.
      Brouwer, R. M.
      Agartz, I.
      Alda, M.
      Aleman, A.
      Alpert, K. I.
      Bearden, C. E.
      Bertolino, A.
      Bois, C.
      Bonvino, A.
      Bramon, E.
      Buimer, E.
      Cahn, W.
      Cannon, D. M.
      Cannon, T. D.
      Caseras, X.
      Castro-Fornieles, J.
      Chen, Q.
      Serna, E.
      Giorgio, A. D.
      Doucet, G.
      Eker, M. C.
      Erk, S.
      Fears, S.
      Foley, S.
      Frangou, S.
      Frankland, A.
      Fullerton, J.
      Glahn, D.
      Goghari, V.
      Goldman, A.
      Gonul, A.
      Gruber, O.
      Haan, L.
      Hajek, T.
      Hawkins, E.
      Heinz, A.
      Hillegers, M.
      Pol, H.
      Hultman, C.
      Ingvar, M.
      Johansson, V.
      Jönsson, E.
      Kane, K.
      Kempton, M.
      Koenis, M.
      Kopecek, M.
      Krabbendam, L.
      Krämer, B.
      Lawrie, S.
      Lenroot, R.
      Marcelis, M.
      Marsman, J-B
      Mattay, V.
      McDonald, C.
      Meyer-Lindenberg, A.
      Michielse, S.
      Mitchell, P.
      Moreno, D.
      Murray, R.
      Mwangi, B.
      Najt, P.
      Neilson, E.
      Newport, J.
      Os, J.
      Overs, B.
      Özerdem, A.
      Picchioni, M.
      Richter, A.
      Roberts, G.
      Aydoğan, A. S.
      Schofield, P.
      Şimşek, F.
      Soares, J.
      Sugranyes, G.
      Toulopoulou, Timothea
      Tronchin, G.
      Walter, H.
      Wang, L.
      Weinberger, D.
      Whalley, H.
      Yalın, N.
      Andreassen, O.
      Ching, C.
      Erp, T.
      Turner, J.
      Jahanshad, N.
      Thompson, P.
      Kahn, R.
      Haren, N.
      Date
      2019
      Source Title
      Biological Psychiatry
      Print ISSN
      0006-3223
      Publisher
      Elsevier
      Volume
      86
      Issue
      7
      Pages
      545 - 556
      Language
      English
      Type
      Report
      Item Usage Stats
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      Abstract
      Abstract Background Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder share genetic liability, and some structural brain abnormalities are common to both conditions. First-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia (FDRs-SZ) show similar brain abnormalities to patients, albeit with smaller effect sizes. Imaging findings in first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar disorder (FDRs-BD) have been inconsistent in the past, but recent studies report regionally greater volumes compared with control subjects. Methods We performed a meta-analysis of global and subcortical brain measures of 6008 individuals (1228 FDRs-SZ, 852 FDRs-BD, 2246 control subjects, 1016 patients with schizophrenia, 666 patients with bipolar disorder) from 34 schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder family cohorts with standardized methods. Analyses were repeated with a correction for intracranial volume (ICV) and for the presence of any psychopathology in the relatives and control subjects. Results FDRs-BD had significantly larger ICV (d = +0.16, q < .05 corrected), whereas FDRs-SZ showed smaller thalamic volumes than control subjects (d = −0.12, q < .05 corrected). ICV explained the enlargements in the brain measures in FDRs-BD. In FDRs-SZ, after correction for ICV, total brain, cortical gray matter, cerebral white matter, cerebellar gray and white matter, and thalamus volumes were significantly smaller; the cortex was thinner (d < −0.09, q < .05 corrected); and third ventricle was larger (d = +0.15, q < .05 corrected). The findings were not explained by psychopathology in the relatives or control subjects. Conclusions Despite shared genetic liability, FDRs-SZ and FDRs-BD show a differential pattern of structural brain abnormalities, specifically a divergent effect in ICV. This may imply that the neurodevelopmental trajectories leading to brain anomalies in schizophrenia or bipolar disorder are distinct.
      Keywords
      Bipolar disorder
      Familial riskImaging
      Meta-analysis
      Neurodevelopment
      Schizophrenia
      Permalink
      http://hdl.handle.net/11693/52842
      Published Version (Please cite this version)
      https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2019.03.985
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