1. Evidence, and replication thereof, that molecular-genetic and environmental risks for psychosis impact through an affective pathway
- Author
-
Javier González-Peñas, Berna Binnur Akdede, Estela Jiménez-López, Silvia Amoretti, Sinan Guloksuz, Pilar A. Saiz, Burçin Cihan, Sanja Andric Petrovic, Miguel Bernardo, Alexander Richards, Meram Can Saka, Güvem Gümüş-Akay, Jose Luis Santos, Semra Ulusoy Kaymak, Tolga Binbay, Jurjen J. Luykx, Halis Ulaş, Julio Sanjuán, Gisela Mezquida, Berna Yalınçetin, Manuel Arrojo, Philippe Delespaul, Nadja P. Maric, Julio Bobes, Alp Üçok, Marina Mihaljevic, Gonzalo López, Eduardo J. Aguilar, Maarten Bak, Eylem Sahin Cankurtaran, Tijana Mirjanic, Bochao D. Lin, Michael Conlon O'Donovan, Cem Atbaşoğlu, Köksal Alptekin, Saskia van Dorsselaer, Vesile Altınyazar, Lotta-Katrin Pries, Gunter Kenis, Angel Carracedo, Ron de Graaf, Margreet ten Have, María Paz García-Portilla, Jim van Os, Mara Parellada, Bart P. F. Rutten, Celso Arango, Haldun Soygür, RS: MHeNs - R2 - Mental Health, MUMC+: MA Psychiatrie (3), MUMC+: Hersen en Zenuw Centrum (3), Psychiatrie & Neuropsychologie, Psychiatry 1, RS: MHeNs - R3 - Neuroscience, MUMC+: MA Niet Med Staf Psychiatrie (9), Basic Neuroscience 1, and MUMC+: VPK Flexteam Calamiteiten (9)
- Subjects
Risk ,Multifactorial Inheritance ,Psychosis ,Hallucinations ,Affective pathway ,CLINICAL PSYCHOSIS ,NEGATIVE SYMPTOMS ,Delusions ,03 medical and health sciences ,0302 clinical medicine ,MENTAL-HEALTH SURVEY ,childhood adversity ,Affective dysregulation ,Humans ,Medicine ,genetics ,psychosis ,Genetic risk ,Applied Psychology ,1ST EPISODE PSYCHOSIS ,GENERAL-POPULATION ,business.industry ,PSYCHIATRIC-DISORDERS ,SHORT-FORM ,Absolute risk reduction ,NETWORK APPROACH ,Ideation ,medicine.disease ,CHILDHOOD TRAUMA ,030227 psychiatry ,Psychiatry and Mental health ,Psychotic Disorders ,Schizophrenia ,SCHIZOPHRENIA SPECTRUM DISORDERS ,Polygenic risk score ,business ,environment ,030217 neurology & neurosurgery ,Schizophrenia spectrum ,Clinical psychology - Abstract
BackgroundThere is evidence that environmental and genetic risk factors for schizophrenia spectrum disorders are transdiagnostic and mediated in part through a generic pathway of affective dysregulation.MethodsWe analysed to what degree the impact of schizophrenia polygenic risk (PRS-SZ) and childhood adversity (CA) on psychosis outcomes was contingent on co-presence of affective dysregulation, defined as significant depressive symptoms, in (i) NEMESIS-2 (n = 6646), a representative general population sample, interviewed four times over nine years and (ii) EUGEI (n = 4068) a sample of patients with schizophrenia spectrum disorder, the siblings of these patients and controls.ResultsThe impact of PRS-SZ on psychosis showed significant dependence on co-presence of affective dysregulation in NEMESIS-2 [relative excess risk due to interaction (RERI): 1.01, p = 0.037] and in EUGEI (RERI = 3.39, p = 0.048). This was particularly evident for delusional ideation (NEMESIS-2: RERI = 1.74, p = 0.003; EUGEI: RERI = 4.16, p = 0.019) and not for hallucinatory experiences (NEMESIS-2: RERI = 0.65, p = 0.284; EUGEI: −0.37, p = 0.547). A similar and stronger pattern of results was evident for CA (RERI delusions and hallucinations: NEMESIS-2: 3.02, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 6.44, p < 0.001; RERI delusional ideation: NEMESIS-2: 3.79, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 5.43, p = 0.001; RERI hallucinatory experiences: NEMESIS-2: 2.46, p < 0.001; EUGEI: 0.54, p = 0.465).ConclusionsThe results, and internal replication, suggest that the effects of known genetic and non-genetic risk factors for psychosis are mediated in part through an affective pathway, from which early states of delusional meaning may arise.
- Published
- 2020
- Full Text
- View/download PDF