Cortical Brain Abnormalities in 4474 Individuals With Schizophrenia and 5098 Control Subjects via the Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics Through Meta Analysis (ENIGMA) Consortium
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Erp, Theo GM. van; Walton, Esther; Hibar, Derrek P.; Schmaal, Lianne; Jiang, Wenhao; Glahn, David C.; Pearlson, Godfrey D.; Yao, Nailin; Fukunaga, Masaki; Hashimoto, Ryota; Okada, Naohiro; Yamamori, Hidenaga; Bustillo, Juan R.; Clark, Vincent P.; Agartz, Ingrid; Mueller, Bryon A.; Cahn, Wiepke; Crespo Facorro, Benedicto
Fecha
2018-11-01Derechos
© 2018. This manuscript version is made available under the CC-BY-NC-ND 4.0 license
Publicado en
Biological Psychiatry
Volume 84, Issue 9, 1 November 2018, Pages 644-654
Editorial
Elsevier
Enlace a la publicación
Palabras clave
Cortical
Imaging
Meta-Analysis
Schizophrenia
Surface Area
Thickness
Resumen/Abstract
Background
The profile of cortical neuroanatomical abnormalities in schizophrenia is not fully understood, despite hundreds of published structural brain imaging studies. This study presents the first meta-analysis of cortical thickness and surface area abnormalities in schizophrenia conducted by the ENIGMA (Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta Analysis) Schizophrenia Working Group.
Methods
The study included data from 4474 individuals with schizophrenia (mean age, 32.3 years; range, 11?78 years; 66% male) and 5098 healthy volunteers (mean age, 32.8 years; range, 10?87 years; 53% male) assessed with standardized methods at 39 centers worldwide.
Results
Compared with healthy volunteers, individuals with schizophrenia have widespread thinner cortex (left/right hemisphere: Cohen?s d = ?0.530/?0.516) and smaller surface area (left/right hemisphere: Cohen?s d = ?0.251/?0.254), with the largest effect sizes for both in frontal and temporal lobe regions. Regional group differences in cortical thickness remained significant when statistically controlling for global cortical thickness, suggesting regional specificity. In contrast, effects for cortical surface area appear global. Case-control, negative, cortical thickness effect sizes were two to three times larger in individuals receiving antipsychotic medication relative to unmedicated individuals. Negative correlations between age and bilateral temporal pole thickness were stronger in individuals with schizophrenia than in healthy volunteers. Regional cortical thickness showed significant negative correlations with normalized medication dose, symptom severity, and duration of illness and positive correlations with age at onset.
Conclusions
The findings indicate that the ENIGMA meta-analysis approach can achieve robust findings in clinical neuroscience studies; also, medication effects should be taken into account in future genetic association studies of cortical thickness in schizophrenia.
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