| Literature DB >> 23680237 |
Uzoezi Ozomaro1, Claes Wahlestedt, Charles B Nemeroff.
Abstract
The central theme of personalized medicine is the premise that an individual's unique physiologic characteristics play a significant role in both disease vulnerability and in response to specific therapies. The major goals of personalized medicine are therefore to predict an individual's susceptibility to developing an illness, achieve accurate diagnosis, and optimize the most efficient and favorable response to treatment. The goal of achieving personalized medicine in psychiatry is a laudable one, because its attainment should be associated with a marked reduction in morbidity and mortality. In this review, we summarize an illustrative selection of studies that are laying the foundation towards personalizing medicine in major depressive disorder, bipolar disorder, and schizophrenia. In addition, we present emerging applications that are likely to advance personalized medicine in psychiatry, with an emphasis on novel biomarkers and neuroimaging.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2013 PMID: 23680237 PMCID: PMC3668172 DOI: 10.1186/1741-7015-11-132
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Med ISSN: 1741-7015 Impact factor: 8.775
Figure 1Personalized medicine. Forefront shows the schematic of the various factors that play into developing a unique phenotypic profile: genetic alterations, epigenetic modifications, clinical diagnostics, biomarker changes, and environmental changes. Upon obtaining a unique phenotypic profile, the psychiatrist is in a better position to either predict susceptibility to disease or make an accurate diagnosis. This, is in turn, allows for therapy targeted to the individual. Background: each individual will have differences in these components, giving rise to a unique phenotypic profile.
Figure 2‘Modified’ central dogma. The central dogma of molecular biology states that DNA is transcribed to RNA, which is then translated into protein. In light of the emerging importance of non-coding RNAs, this diagram shows how non-coding RNAs serve to regulate each step in the central dogma, including regulating their own transcription.
Selection of imaging findings in psychiatric illness
| | • Reduced activity in frontal lobes | Various | PET, fMRI, EEG, SPECT | [ | |
| | | • Reduced HPC volumes | Meta-analyses | MRI | [ |
| | | • Greater reduction in HPC volume with increased duration of untreated MDD | 38 male outpatients | MRI | [ |
| | | • Increased baseline activity in pulvinar nuclei bilaterally | Meta-analysis | PET and SPECT | [ |
| | | • Increased amygdala, dorsal ACC, and insular response to negative stimuli compared with healthy controls | Meta-analysis | Task-based fMRI | [ |
| | | • Reduced dlPFC and dorsal striatum response to negative stimuli compared with healthy controls | Meta-analysis | Task-based fMRI | [ |
| | 5-HTTLPR -S or Lg allele: | Increased amygdala reactivity to masked emotional faces; correlated to lifetime psychiatric hospitalization in MDD | 35MDD, 32 controls | fMRI | [ |
| | 5-HTTLPR -S or Lg allele: | Increased bilateral amygdala activation after emotional stimuli (allele effects are additive) | 27 MDD on medication | fMRI | [ |
| | 5-HT1A - 1019G allele: | ||||
| | 5-HTTLPR- L/L: | Reduced HPC volumes compared with controls | 40 MDD, 40 controls | MRI | [ |
| Late onset (LO) MDD | 5-HTTLPR- L/L: | Reduced HPC volumes compared with S/L or S/S genotypes | 63 LO MDD, 72 EO MDD, 83 controls | MRI | [ |
| Early onset (EO) MDD | 5-HTTLPR -S allele: | Reduced HPC volumes compared with left allele carriers | | | |
| | • Increased size of lateral ventricles (right ventricle only in [ | Meta-analyses | CT and MRI | [ | |
| | | • Increased number of deep white-matter hyperintensities | Meta-analyses | CT and MRI | [ |
| | | • Increased number of subcortical gray-matter hyperintensities | Meta-analysis | MRI | [ |
| | | • Increased activity in limbic structures (left side only in [ | Meta-analyses | fMRI and PET | [ |
| | | • Reduced activity in frontal structures (vlPFC and dlPFC [ | |||
| | Pediatric population: | • Reduced amygdala volume | Meta-analyses | MRI | [ |
| | • Reduced frontal-lobe activity at rest and during task activation | Meta-analysis | MRI, PET | [ | |
| | | • Increased lateral ventricular size | Meta-analyses | CT and MRI | [ |
| | | • Increased D2 dopamine receptor density | Meta-analysis | PET and SPECT | [ |
| | | • Reduced frontal gray matter | Meta-analyses | MRI | [ |
| | SZ: | • Reduced bilateral HPC volume relative to controls | Meta-analyses | MRI | [ |
| | nonpsychotic 1st deg family: | Meta-analysis | MRI | [ | |
| BDNF 66Val/Val carriers: | • Reduced activation of the cingulate, lateral PFC and lateral parietal regions during verbal memory task | 58 high-risk subjects (first-degree or second-degree family with SZ) | fMRI | [ |
+/−A, alcohol abuse positive/negative subjects; ACC, anterior cingulate cortex; Cho, choline; CT, computed tomography; DA, dopamine; dlPFC, dorsolateral pre-frontal cortex; EO, early onset; fMRI, functional magnetic resonance imaging; 1H-MRS, proton MR spectroscopy; HPC, hippocampal; LO, late onset; MDD, major depressive disorder; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; NAA, N-acetylaspartate; parahippocampal gyrus; PET, positron emission tomography; Tx, treated; vlPFC, ventral-lateral pre-frontal cortex; vmPFC, ventral-medial pre-frontal cortex.
Psychiatric disease susceptibilities
| Caucasian | | + | | Homozygous or heterozygous carriers of the short allele had higher frequency of depression and suicidality when exposed to stressful life events. | SIG | [ | ||
| STin2.9 | Caucasian | | | | Increased frequency in MDD relative to controls | SIG | [ | |
| Caucasian | | | | Increased frequency in MDD relative to controls | SIG | [ | ||
| microsatellite at 11p15.3-p14 | Caucasian community-based sibships | | | | Association with MDD susceptibility and microsatellite | SIG | [ | |
| Various | Caucasian | | | | Six haplotypes associated with MDD risk | SIG | [ | |
| rs120074175 (p.R441H) | Caucasian (90%), AA (8%), East Asian (2%) | | | | Higher frequency of SNPs in patients with MDD compared with controls or patients with BP | SIG | [ | |
| rs120074175 (p.R441H) | Caucasian (84%), Hispanic (6%), East Asian (5%), AA (3%), others (2%) | | | | SNP not identified in non-treatment-resistant and treatment-resistant patients with MDD, or in treatment-resistant patients with BP, or in controls | NS | [ | |
| rs120074175 (p.R441H), rs1843809 (c.608 + 5263G>T) | Caucasian | | | | Higher frequency of SNPs in MDD relative to controls | SIG | [ | |
| Various | East Asian (Korean) | | | | No association of the SNPs rs4570625, rs10748185, rs11179027, rs4469933, or rs17110747 in MDD, BP, or SZ | NS | [ | |
| rs4570625 (c.-141-703G>T), rs17110747 (c.*479G>A) | Meta-analysis | | | | SNPs associated with MDD susceptibility by fixed-effects modeling; rs4570625 remained significant using random-effects calculations | SIG | [ | |
| rs4570625-rs10748185 (G>A). | East Asian (Korean) inpatients | | | | Haplotype significantly associated with higher MADRS endpoints in MDD | SIG | [ | |
| rs3800373 (c.*1136G>T)-(CC) rs1360780 (c.106-2636A>G) | Post-mortem brain samples, ethnicity not specified | | | | Five clinical groups were compared: MDD, MDD + psychosis, MDD + HIV, HIV-positive, and HIV-negative. Genotype frequencies in the MDD and the MDD + psychosis groups differed from published allelic frequencies | SIG | [ | |
| rs1360780 (c.106-2636A>G) | Caucasian inpatients with MDD, BD, or dysthymia | | | | Carriers of the TT genotype experienced more depressive episodes, by a factor of 2:1 compared with the CC or CT genotypes | SIG | [ | |
| rs1360780 (c.106-2636A>G) (TT), rs3800373 (GG) | Caucasian treatment-resistant adolescents | | | | Genotypes were associated with suicidal events | SIG | [ | |
| rs9470080, rs9394309, rs7748266, rs1360780; BM: reduced daytime cortisol secretion | Caucasian older people | | | + | Minor alleles were associated with decreased daytime cortisol levels and increased likelihood of depressive symptoms | SIG | [ | |
| rs9470080 (c.-19-35815A>G), rs9296158 (c.509-1901T>C) and EF: prolonged stress exposure | East Asian (Korean) | | + | | Two SNPs were associated with anxiety and depression after prolonged stress in patients with cancer patients | SIG | [ | |
| rs110402 (GG), rs242924 (GG); and EF: childhood trauma; and BM: response to DEX/CRH test | Healthy Caucasians with history of early life stress | | + | + | In adults who had experienced maltreatment, the GG genotypes were associated with increased cortisol response to DEX/CRH test | SIG | [ | |
| rs10473984 EF: childhood trauma | | | + | | SNP works synergistically with childhood trauma to increase risk of MDD | SIG | | |
| rs110402 (c.34-4338G>A); EF: childhood abuse; and BM: cortisol response to DEX/CRH test | 1: AA, 2: ethnically diverse | | + | + | In adult men who had experienced child abuse, the A allele was associated with reduced MDD symptoms and reduced cortisol response to DEX/CRH test | SIG | [ | |
| rs110402 (c.34-4338G>A), rs7209436 (c.33 + 8207C>T) and rs7209436-rs110402-rs242924 (TAT); EF: childhood abuse | AA, Caucasian | | + | | Rare alleles were protective in a dose-dependent manner against MDD in the presence of child abuse | SIG | [ | |
| rs7209436-rs110402-rs242924 (TAT); EF: childhood abuse | Caucasian (>90%) | | + | | TAT haplotype was protective against MDD in women exposed to severe maltreatment, but not in a replication study using different measure of trauma | SIG | [ | |
| rs242939 (c.241 + 1631C>T), three haplotypes | East Asian (Chinese) | | | | Allele and genotype association with MDD | SIG | [ | |
| rs110402 (c.34-4348G>A) | Caucasian | | | | Association between SNP and early onset of MDD and increased risk for a seasonal pattern | SIG | [ | |
| Haplotype block | Caucasian (Swedish) | | | | In patients with recurrent MDD, haplotype block (s02-TT and s11-TT and s14-T) was significantly associated with disease compared with controls | SIG | [ | |
| Haplotype block | Caucasian (Swedish and Belgian) | | | | Could not replicate findings of [ | NS | [ | |
| 42 (CC); EF: early life stress (ELS); BM: frontolimbic gray-matter alterations | Healthy Caucasian | | + | + | Genotype + ELS was a predictor of depressed mood. Carriers had greater frontolimbic gray-matter alterations, which were increased by ELS | SIG | [ | |
| rs9371601 (c.1653 + 2159C>A) | Caucasian | | | | Higher frequency of SNPs in recurrent MDD relative to controls | SIG | [ | |
| EPI: | Suicide victims | + | + | | In abused victims, | SIG | [ | |
| -- | BM: CSF concentration of CRF | Various | | | + | Increased CSF concentration of CRF is a replicable finding in MDD. Also seen in suicide victims | SIG | [ |
| -- | EF: birth trauma | Monozygotic twins discordant for MDD | | + | | Increased occurrence of birth trauma in SZ-affected twin | SIG | [ |
| -- | EF: obstetric complications, e.g. abnormal fetal growth/development, pregnancy and delivery complications | Meta-analysis of population-based prospective studies | | + | | Obstetric complications increased risk for SZ | SIG | [ |
| -- | BM: CSF concentration of norepinephrine metabolite MHPG | Caucasian (81%) with MDD (85%) or BD (15%) | | | + | Lower levels of MHPG were predictive of suicidal behavior, and correlated with higher medical lethality of suicide attempt | SIG | [ |
| -- | rs1360780 (c.106-2636A>G) | Caucasian, Black | | | | Association of SNP with MDD risk in Caucasian sample | SIG | [ |
| rs4713902 (c.-19-3406A>G), rs7757037 (c.841-238C>A), rs9296158 (c.509-1901T>C), rs3800373 (c.*1136G>T), rs9380525 (c.-19-22418C>G) | Family trios and quads with BD-I, or BD-II + rMDD, or SZA-BD | | | | SNPs associated with BD in populations studied (BD-I, BD-II + rMDD, SZA/BD); rs4713902 remained significant after correction for multiple testing | SIG | [ | |
| various | Caucasian (Ashkenazi Jewish) | | | | No significant SNP or haplotype associations with BD or SZ identified | NS | [ | |
| rs4713916 (c.20 + 18122T>C), rs1360780 (c.106-2636A>G), rs380037 | Caucasian | | | | No significant association between SNPs and BD | NS | [ | |
| rs7107287 (c.-208 + 13499G>T), rs895682 (c.-135 + 13626T>C), rs1481892 (c.-208 + 2451G>C), rs4757142 (c.-207-5839G>A) | Caucasian family trios | | | | SNPs rs7107287 and rs895682 showed significant transmission bias in family samples. In Pittsburg sample, genotype distribution of SNPs rs1481892, rs7107287 and rs4757142 differed from that of controls | SIG | [ | |
| rs2279665 (c.114G>C), rs2291738 (c.2726-4A>G), rs774026 (c.1578 + 22T>C), rs2291739 (p.P1018L) | Caucasian family trios | | | | SNPs (rs2279665, 2291738) showed transmission bias in family samples. Haplotype over-transmission involving SNPs rs2279665, rs774026, rs2291738, and rs2291739 | SIG | [ | |
| rs534654 (c.793-485A>G), rs6850524 (c.-289-5765G>C), rs4340844 (c.559 + 996T>G) | Family trios and quads | | | | Suggestive evidence for transmission disequilibrium | SUG | [ | |
| rs9371601 (c.1653 + 2159C>A) | Caucasian | | | | Higher frequency of SNP in BD compared with controls | SIG | [ | |
| EPI: | Post-mortem brain samples (97% Caucasian) | + | | | Reduced methylation of | SIG | | |
| EPI: | Caucasian post-mortem brain samples | + | | | Promoter methylation did not differ between BD and control brains | NS | [ | |
| -- | EF: obstetric complications | Meta-analysis | | + | | No findings to suggest higher risk for BD relative to MDD or controls after exposure to obstetric complications | NS | [ |
| -- | BM: peripheral blood levels of BDNF | Meta-analysis | | | + | Relative to controls, patients with BD in manic or depressed states had reduced serum and plasma BDNF levels | SIG | [ |
| -- | BM: serum or plasma levels of BDNF | Meta-analysis | | | + | Relative to controls, patients with BD in manic or depressed states had reduced serum and plasma BDNF levels | SIG | [ |
| GWAS | various | GWAS of MGS sample (Caucasian, AA) | | | | No significant finding in MGS case–control sample GWAS | NS | [ |
| MHC region on chr6 | rs3130375 (7kb from | Caucasian, AA | | | | Imputed SNP rs3130375 reached genome-wide significance. Strong suggestion for a polygenic basis for SZ | SIG | [ |
| MHC region on chr6 | various | Meta-analysis of MGS, ISC, and SGENE data | | | | Association between SZ and region of LD on chromosome 6p22.1 | SIG | [ |
| MHC region on chr6 | GWAS of SGENE-plus, ISC, and MGS (Caucasian) | | | | With combined samples, MHC region SNPs showed genome-wide significance | SIG | [ | |
| rs165688 (p.V158M) | Caucasian with velocardiofacial syndrome (VCFS) ± SZ | | | | No correlation between allelic distribution and SZ in individuals with VCFS | NS | [ | |
| rs165599 (c.*522G>A), rs737865 (c.-92 + 701A>G), rs165688 (p.V158M) | Caucasian (Ashkenazi Jewish) | | | | G allele in the SNPs was associated with SZ. Haplotype rs737865-rs165599 (G-G) had most significant overall association with SZ | SIG | [ | |
| rs737865 (c.-92 + 701A>G) | Meta-analysis (Caucasian) | | | | Nominally significant association between SNP and SZ in analyses restricted to European samples | SIG | [ | |
| t(1:11)(q43,q21) | Caucasian (Scottish pedigree) | | | | Translocation found to be in significant LD with SZ | SIG | [ | |
| rs821616 (p.S704C), rs821597 (c.2042 + 7630G>A), rs7546310 (c.1982-32754A>C) BM: hippocampal structure and function | Caucasian, replication: family trios (Caucasian and AA) | | | + | 704-Ser associated with altered hippocampal structure and formation in healthy subjects. Association between 704-Ser and SZ. Three-SNP haplotype associated with SZ in the family sample | SIG | [ | |
| n.9481C>T, n.11085C>A, n.11160G>A, n.11870T>C, n.11859T>C | Caucasian (Scottish) | | | | No co-segregation with SZ or BD or significant association was detected. SNPs were not in LD | NS | [ | |
| EPI: Membrane-bound | Caucasian post-mortem brain samples | + | | | NS | [ | ||
| Post-mortem brain samples (97% Caucasian) | + | | | Reduced methylation of | SIG | [ | ||
| rs1344706 (c.256-19902A>C) | GWAS: Caucasian (English); replication: Caucasian and East Asian (BUL, GRM, US, AUS, JPN, CHN, and ISR) | | | | Nominally significant association between SNP and SZ in samples; genome-wide association when case sample extended to include BD | SIG | [ | |
| rs1344706 (c.256-19902A>C), rs7597593 (c.111 + 69783T>C), rs17508595 (c.111 + 19311C>G) | Caucasian (Irish) | | | | Nominally significant association between SNPs and SZ + poor-outcome schizoaffective disorder | SIG | [ | |
| rs12477914 and rs1366840 as surrogates for rs1344706 (c.256-19902A>C) | Initial study: Caucasian; follow-up: Caucasian + CHN | | | | Nominally significant association between SNPs and SZ. When stratified by population, significant in 2 (RUS and DNK) of 13 (HUN, NOR, RUS, SWE, FIN, DEU, DNK, GBR, SCO, ISL, NLD, ITA, CHN) ethnic groups | SIG | [ | |
| rs1344706 (c.256-19902A>C) | East Asian (Han Chinese) | | | | Nominally significant association between SNP and SZ in a population-based sample. In a family-based trio study, trend toward significant over-transmission | SIG/SUG | [ | |
| rs9960767 (c.146-23634T>G) | Caucasian (BEL, DNK, DEU, IRL, ITA, FIN, SPA, UK, USA) | | | | Association between the C allele and SZ in GWAS and in replication studies | SIG | [ | |
| rs2958182 (c.146-17653T>A) (as surrogate for rs9960767) | East Asian (Han Chinese) | | | | SNP substituted for rs9960767 as rs9960767 is not polymorphic in CHN, is in LD with rs9960767, and is significantly associated with SZ in CHN | SIG | [ | |
| rs12966547 (g.542881G>A) | Caucasian | | | | Significant association between SNP and SZ | SIG | [ | |
| HapICE (SNP8NRG221132, SNP8NRG221533, SNP8NRG241930, SNP8NRG243177 and SNP8NRG433E1006, & microsatellite repeats 478B14-848 and 420M9-1395) | Caucasian | | | | Haplotype significantly associated with SZ, with a relative risk of 2.2 | SIG | [ | |
| EPI: | Post-mortem brain samples | + | | | Increased methylation of | SIG | [ | |
| EPI: | Post-mortem brain samples | + | | | By contrast to [ | NS | [ | |
| EPI: cytosine methylation at rs6313 (c.102>T) | Post-mortem brain samples | + | | | 102C carriers have reduced | SIG | rev. in [ | |
| rs4570625 (c.-141-703G>T) rs4570625- rs4565946 ((c.-141-703G>T)-(c.255 + 1256C>T) (G-C)) | Caucasian | | | | Higher frequency of SNP in patients with MDD compared with controls in discovery sample; not replicated in replication sample. Trend for rs4570625-rs4565946 G-C haplotype | SUG | [ | |
| rs1036145 (c.76 + 496G>A) | NIMH and CATIE cohorts | | | | Carriers of rs1036145-TT genotype showed greater change on the PANSS than carriers of TC and CC genotypes. rs1036145-TT and rs3800779-TT showed significant improvement in positive symptoms compared with TC/CC genotypes | SIG | [ | |
| -- | EF: prenatal exposure to influenza (determined by ecologic data only) | Caucasian (Finnish) | | + | | Exposure to influenza during second and third trimesters increased risk of hospitalization for SZ | SUG | [ |
| -- | EF: prenatal exposure to influenza (determined by ecologic data only) | Caucasian (English, Welsh) | | + | | Number of births with subsequent SZ development was higher during influenza epidemic relative to corresponding time during non-epidemic years | SUG | [ |
| -- | EF: prenatal exposure to influenza (serologically documented) | Caucasian, AA, Others (Native American, MEX, East Asian) | | + | | Early to mid-gestational exposure to influenza increased risk for SZ | SIG | [ |
| -- | EF: prenatal exposure to influenza | Meta-analysis | | + | | No association between exposure and SZ identified | NS | [ |
| -- | EF: prenatal exposure to maternal stress (wars, spousal demise, disasters, etc.) | Meta-analysis | + | Data show no effect of prenatal stress on risk for SZ | NS | [ | ||
5-HTTLPR, 5-hydroxytryptophan transporter-linked polymorphic region; AA, African-American; AU, Australian; BD, bipolar disorder; BD-I, BD-II bipolar disorder types I and II; BDNF, brain-derived neurotrophic factor; BEL, Belgian; BGR, Bulgarian; BM: biomarkers; CATIE, Clinical Antipsychotic Trials of Intervention Effectiveness; CHN, Chinese; CRF, corticotropin-releasing factor; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; DEX/CRH, Dexamethasone/corticotropin-releasing hormone; DNK, Danish; EF, environmental factors, ELS, early life stress; EPI, epigenetic factors; FIN, Finnish; GRM, German; GWAS, GWAS, Genome-wide association studies; HIV, human immunodeficiency virus; ISL, Icelandic; IRL, Irish; ISC, International Schizophrenia Consortium; ITA, Italian; ISR, Israeli; JPN, Japanese; KOR, Korean; LD, linkage disequilibrium; MB-COMT, membrane-bound catechol-O-methyltransferase; MDD, major depressive disorder; MEX, Mexican; MHPG, 3-methoxy-4-hydroxyphenylglycol;NIMH, National Institute of Mental Health; NLD, Dutch (Netherlands); NS, not significant; rMDD, recurrent MDD; RUS, Russian; SCO, Scottish; SGENE, Schizophrenia Genetics Consortium; SIG, significant; SNP, single-nucleotide polymorphism; SPA, Spanish; SUG, suggestive; SZ, schizophrenia; SZA-BD, schizoaffective disorder, manic or bipolar type; UK, United Kingdom; USA, American; VCFS, velocardiofacial syndrome.