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Synergistic effects of childhood adversity and polygenic risk in first-episode psychosis: the EU-GEI study

Authors :
European Commission
South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority
Brain and Behavior Research Foundation
Aas, Monica [0000-0002-2338-5826]
Aas, Monica
Alameda, Luis
Di Forti, Marta
Quattrone, Diego
Dazzan, Paola
Trotta, Antonella
Ferraro, Laura
Rodríguez, Victoria
Vassos, Evangelos
Sham, Pak C.
Tripoli, Giada
La Cascia, Caterina
La Barbera, Daniele
Tarricone, Ilaria
Muratori, Roberto
Berardi, Domenico
Lasalvia, Antonio
Tosato, Sarah
Szöke, Andrei
Llorca, Pierre-Michel
Arango, Celso
Tortelli, Andrea
Haan, Lieuwe de
Velthorst, Eva
Bobes, Julio
Bernardo, Miguel
Sanjuán, Julio
Santos, José Luis
Arrojo, Manuel
Del-Ben, Cristina Marta
Menezes, Paulo Rossi
Selten, Jean-Paul
Jones, Peter B.
Jongsma, Hannah E.
Kirkbride, James B.
Rutten, Bart P. F.
Os, Jim van
Gayer-Anderson, Charlotte
Murray, Robin M.
Morgan, Craig
European Commission
South-Eastern Norway Regional Health Authority
Brain and Behavior Research Foundation
Aas, Monica [0000-0002-2338-5826]
Aas, Monica
Alameda, Luis
Di Forti, Marta
Quattrone, Diego
Dazzan, Paola
Trotta, Antonella
Ferraro, Laura
Rodríguez, Victoria
Vassos, Evangelos
Sham, Pak C.
Tripoli, Giada
La Cascia, Caterina
La Barbera, Daniele
Tarricone, Ilaria
Muratori, Roberto
Berardi, Domenico
Lasalvia, Antonio
Tosato, Sarah
Szöke, Andrei
Llorca, Pierre-Michel
Arango, Celso
Tortelli, Andrea
Haan, Lieuwe de
Velthorst, Eva
Bobes, Julio
Bernardo, Miguel
Sanjuán, Julio
Santos, José Luis
Arrojo, Manuel
Del-Ben, Cristina Marta
Menezes, Paulo Rossi
Selten, Jean-Paul
Jones, Peter B.
Jongsma, Hannah E.
Kirkbride, James B.
Rutten, Bart P. F.
Os, Jim van
Gayer-Anderson, Charlotte
Murray, Robin M.
Morgan, Craig
Publication Year :
2023

Abstract

[Background] A history of childhood adversity is associated with psychotic disorder, with an increase in risk according to the number of exposures. However, it is not known why only some exposed individuals go on to develop psychosis. One possibility is pre-existing polygenic vulnerability. Here, we investigated, in the largest sample of first-episode psychosis (FEP) cases to date, whether childhood adversity and high polygenic risk scores for schizophrenia (SZ-PRS) combine synergistically to increase the risk of psychosis, over and above the effect of each alone.<br />[Methods] We assigned a schizophrenia-polygenic risk score (SZ-PRS), calculated from the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium (PGC2), to all participants in a sample of 384 FEP patients and 690 controls from the case–control component of the EU-GEI study. Only participants of European ancestry were included in the study. A history of childhood adversity was collected using the Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ). Synergistic effects were estimated using the interaction contrast ratio (ICR) [odds ratio (OR)exposure and PRS − ORexposure − ORPRS + 1] with adjustment for potential confounders.<br />[Results] There was some evidence that the combined effect of childhood adversities and polygenic risk was greater than the sum of each alone, as indicated by an ICR greater than zero [i.e. ICR 1.28, 95% confidence interval (CI) −1.29 to 3.85]. Examining subtypes of childhood adversities, the strongest synergetic effect was observed for physical abuse (ICR 6.25, 95% CI −6.25 to 20.88).<br />[Conclusions] Our findings suggest possible synergistic effects of genetic liability and childhood adversity experiences in the onset of FEP, but larger samples are needed to increase precision of estimates.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Notes :
English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1416002747
Document Type :
Electronic Resource