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Multivariate relationships between peripheral inflammatory marker subtypes and cognitive and brain structural measures in psychosis

Authors :
Matcheri S. Keshavan
Jeffrey R. Bishop
Carol A. Tamminga
Godfrey D. Pearlson
Olivia Lutz
Paulo Lizano
James L. Reilly
Lyle Paskowitz
Baolin Wu
John A. Sweeney
Leah H. Rubin
S. Kristian Hill
Seenae Eum
Elliot S. Gershon
Brett A. Clementz
Adam M. Lee
Sarah K. Keedy
Yanxun Xu
Source :
Molecular Psychiatry. 26:3430-3443
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2020.

Abstract

Elevations in peripheral inflammatory markers have been reported in patients with psychosis. Whether this represents an inflammatory process defined by individual or subgroups of markers is unclear. Further, relationships between peripheral inflammatory marker elevations and brain structure, cognition, and clinical features of psychosis remain unclear. We hypothesized that a pattern of plasma inflammatory markers, and an inflammatory subtype established from this pattern, would be elevated across the psychosis spectrum and associated with cognition and brain structural alterations. Clinically stable psychosis probands (Schizophrenia spectrum, n = 79; Psychotic Bipolar disorder, n = 61) and matched healthy controls (HC, n = 60) were assessed for 15 peripheral inflammatory markers, cortical thickness, subcortical volume, cognition, and symptoms. A combination of unsupervised exploratory factor analysis and hierarchical clustering was used to identify inflammation subtypes. Levels of IL6, TNFα, VEGF, and CRP were significantly higher in psychosis probands compared to HCs, and there were marker-specific differences when comparing diagnostic groups. Individual and/or inflammatory marker patterns were associated with neuroimaging, cognition, and symptom measures. A higher inflammation subgroup was defined by elevations in a group of 7 markers in 36% of Probands and 20% of HCs. Probands in the elevated inflammatory marker group performed significantly worse on cognitive measures of visuo-spatial working memory and response inhibition, displayed elevated hippocampal, amygdala, putamen and thalamus volumes, and evidence of gray matter thickening compared to the proband group with low inflammatory marker levels. These findings specify the nature of peripheral inflammatory marker alterations in psychotic disorders and establish clinical, neurocognitive and neuroanatomic associations with increased inflammatory activation in psychosis. The identification of a specific subgroup of patients with inflammatory alteration provides a potential means for targeting treatment with anti-inflammatory medications.

Details

ISSN :
14765578 and 13594184
Volume :
26
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Molecular Psychiatry
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........7ef516f2c8e44e5b58b5684d9d1ec077
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41380-020-00914-0