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S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS

BACKGROUND: Despite an increasing research and clinical focus on trans-diagnostic approaches to mental health, it remains unclear whether different diagnostic categories share a common neuronatomical basis. The current investigation sought to investigate whether a shared (trans-diagnostic) set of st...

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Autores principales: Qiyong, Gong, Scarpazza, Cristina, Dai, Jing, He, Manxi, Xu, Xin, Shi, Yan, Zhou, Baiwan, Vreira, Sandra, McCrory, Eamon, Yang, Cheng, Zang, Feifei, Lui, Su, Mechelli, Andrea
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5888883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.809
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author Qiyong, Gong
Scarpazza, Cristina
Dai, Jing
He, Manxi
Xu, Xin
Shi, Yan
Zhou, Baiwan
Vreira, Sandra
McCrory, Eamon
Yang, Cheng
Zang, Feifei
Lui, Su
Mechelli, Andrea
author_facet Qiyong, Gong
Scarpazza, Cristina
Dai, Jing
He, Manxi
Xu, Xin
Shi, Yan
Zhou, Baiwan
Vreira, Sandra
McCrory, Eamon
Yang, Cheng
Zang, Feifei
Lui, Su
Mechelli, Andrea
author_sort Qiyong, Gong
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Despite an increasing research and clinical focus on trans-diagnostic approaches to mental health, it remains unclear whether different diagnostic categories share a common neuronatomical basis. The current investigation sought to investigate whether a shared (trans-diagnostic) set of structural alterations characterized schizophrenia, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder, and determine whether any such alterations reflected markers of psychiatric illness or pre-existing familial vulnerability. METHODS: A total of 404 patients with a psychiatric diagnosis were recruited (psychosis, n=129; unipolar depression, n=92; post-traumatic stress disorder, n=91; obsessive compulsive disorder, n=92) alongside 201 healthy controls and 20 unaffected first-degree relatives. We collected structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging scans from each participant using the same 3.0 Tesla scanner and acquisition sequence, and tested for trans-diagnostic alterations using Voxel-Based Morphometry. RESULTS: We report that the four psychiatric groups were all characterized by significantly greater gray matter volume in the bilateral putamen relative to healthy controls (right putamen: x=32 y=6 z=-2; z-score: 5.97; p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction; left putamen: x=-30 y=5 z=-7; z-score: 4.97; p-value=0.001 after FWE-correction). Furthermore, the volume of this region was positively correlated with severity of symptoms across groups, so that a higher gray matter volume in the putamen was associated with higher severity of symptoms (partial correlation: the results are age and gender corrected; right putamen: r=0.313, p<0.001; left putamen: =0.326, p<0.001). Bilateral putamen enlargement was also evident in unaffected relatives compared to healthy controls (right putamen: x=32 y=-6 z=2; t-value: 8.13, p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction; left putamen: x=-32 y=-8 z=2; z-score:9.39, p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction). DISCUSSION: These findings indicate that increased putamen volume may reflect a trans-diagnostic marker of underlying familial vulnerability to psychopathology. This raises the prospect that this region could be used to assess degree of familiar vulnerability to psychopathology above and beyond traditional diagnostic boundaries. Our investigation provides support to emerging conceptualisations of psychiatric illness, in which each disorder is best understood as a combination of diagnosis-specific features and a trans-diagnostic factor reflecting general psychopathology.
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spelling pubmed-58888832018-04-11 S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS Qiyong, Gong Scarpazza, Cristina Dai, Jing He, Manxi Xu, Xin Shi, Yan Zhou, Baiwan Vreira, Sandra McCrory, Eamon Yang, Cheng Zang, Feifei Lui, Su Mechelli, Andrea Schizophr Bull Abstracts BACKGROUND: Despite an increasing research and clinical focus on trans-diagnostic approaches to mental health, it remains unclear whether different diagnostic categories share a common neuronatomical basis. The current investigation sought to investigate whether a shared (trans-diagnostic) set of structural alterations characterized schizophrenia, depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder, and determine whether any such alterations reflected markers of psychiatric illness or pre-existing familial vulnerability. METHODS: A total of 404 patients with a psychiatric diagnosis were recruited (psychosis, n=129; unipolar depression, n=92; post-traumatic stress disorder, n=91; obsessive compulsive disorder, n=92) alongside 201 healthy controls and 20 unaffected first-degree relatives. We collected structural Magnetic Resonance Imaging scans from each participant using the same 3.0 Tesla scanner and acquisition sequence, and tested for trans-diagnostic alterations using Voxel-Based Morphometry. RESULTS: We report that the four psychiatric groups were all characterized by significantly greater gray matter volume in the bilateral putamen relative to healthy controls (right putamen: x=32 y=6 z=-2; z-score: 5.97; p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction; left putamen: x=-30 y=5 z=-7; z-score: 4.97; p-value=0.001 after FWE-correction). Furthermore, the volume of this region was positively correlated with severity of symptoms across groups, so that a higher gray matter volume in the putamen was associated with higher severity of symptoms (partial correlation: the results are age and gender corrected; right putamen: r=0.313, p<0.001; left putamen: =0.326, p<0.001). Bilateral putamen enlargement was also evident in unaffected relatives compared to healthy controls (right putamen: x=32 y=-6 z=2; t-value: 8.13, p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction; left putamen: x=-32 y=-8 z=2; z-score:9.39, p-value<0.001 after FWE-correction). DISCUSSION: These findings indicate that increased putamen volume may reflect a trans-diagnostic marker of underlying familial vulnerability to psychopathology. This raises the prospect that this region could be used to assess degree of familiar vulnerability to psychopathology above and beyond traditional diagnostic boundaries. Our investigation provides support to emerging conceptualisations of psychiatric illness, in which each disorder is best understood as a combination of diagnosis-specific features and a trans-diagnostic factor reflecting general psychopathology. Oxford University Press 2018-04 2018-04-01 /pmc/articles/PMC5888883/ http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.809 Text en © Maryland Psychiatric Research Center 2018. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Abstracts
Qiyong, Gong
Scarpazza, Cristina
Dai, Jing
He, Manxi
Xu, Xin
Shi, Yan
Zhou, Baiwan
Vreira, Sandra
McCrory, Eamon
Yang, Cheng
Zang, Feifei
Lui, Su
Mechelli, Andrea
S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title_full S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title_fullStr S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title_full_unstemmed S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title_short S22. A TRANSDIAGNOSTIC NEUROANATOMICAL SIGNATURE OF PSYCHIATRIC ILLNESS
title_sort s22. a transdiagnostic neuroanatomical signature of psychiatric illness
topic Abstracts
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5888883/
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sby018.809
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