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The multimodal Munich Clinical Deep Phenotyping study to bridge the translational gap in severe mental illness treatment research

Authors :
Lenka Krčmář
Iris Jäger
Emanuel Boudriot
Katharina Hanken
Vanessa Gabriel
Julian Melcher
Nicole Klimas
Fanny Dengl
Susanne Schmoelz
Pauline Pingen
Mattia Campana
Joanna Moussiopoulou
Vladislav Yakimov
Georgios Ioannou
Sven Wichert
Silvia DeJonge
Peter Zill
Boris Papazov
Valéria de Almeida
Sabrina Galinski
Nadja Gabellini
Genc Hasanaj
Matin Mortazavi
Temmuz Karali
Alexandra Hisch
Marcel S Kallweit
Verena J. Meisinger
Lisa Löhrs
Karin Neumeier
Stephanie Behrens
Susanne Karch
Benedikt Schworm
Christoph Kern
Siegfried Priglinger
Berend Malchow
Johann Steiner
Alkomiet Hasan
Frank Padberg
Oliver Pogarell
Peter Falkai
Andrea Schmitt
Elias Wagner
Daniel Keeser
Florian J. Raabe
Source :
Frontiers in Psychiatry, Vol 14 (2023)
Publication Year :
2023
Publisher :
Frontiers Media S.A., 2023.

Abstract

IntroductionTreatment of severe mental illness (SMI) symptoms, especially negative symptoms and cognitive dysfunction in schizophrenia, remains a major unmet need. There is good evidence that SMIs have a strong genetic background and are characterized by multiple biological alterations, including disturbed brain circuits and connectivity, dysregulated neuronal excitation-inhibition, disturbed dopaminergic and glutamatergic pathways, and partially dysregulated inflammatory processes. The ways in which the dysregulated signaling pathways are interconnected remains largely unknown, in part because well-characterized clinical studies on comprehensive biomaterial are lacking. Furthermore, the development of drugs to treat SMIs such as schizophrenia is limited by the use of operationalized symptom-based clusters for diagnosis.MethodsIn line with the Research Domain Criteria initiative, the Clinical Deep Phenotyping (CDP) study is using a multimodal approach to reveal the neurobiological underpinnings of clinically relevant schizophrenia subgroups by performing broad transdiagnostic clinical characterization with standardized neurocognitive assessments, multimodal neuroimaging, electrophysiological assessments, retinal investigations, and omics-based analyzes of blood and cerebrospinal fluid. Moreover, to bridge the translational gap in biological psychiatry the study includes in vitro investigations on human-induced pluripotent stem cells, which are available from a subset of participants.ResultsHere, we report on the feasibility of this multimodal approach, which has been successfully initiated in the first participants in the CDP cohort; to date, the cohort comprises over 194 individuals with SMI and 187 age and gender matched healthy controls. In addition, we describe the applied research modalities and study objectives.DiscussionThe identification of cross-diagnostic and diagnosis-specific biotype-informed subgroups of patients and the translational dissection of those subgroups may help to pave the way toward precision medicine with artificial intelligence-supported tailored interventions and treatment. This aim is particularly important in psychiatry, a field where innovation is urgently needed because specific symptom domains, such as negative symptoms and cognitive dysfunction, and treatment-resistant symptoms in general are still difficult to treat.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
16640640
Volume :
14
Database :
Directory of Open Access Journals
Journal :
Frontiers in Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
edsdoj.88ac63b7856b44de89d839bfbaa48171
Document Type :
article
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2023.1179811