| Literature DB >> 30190688 |
Guillaume Fond1, Christophe Lançon1, Pascal Auquier1, Laurent Boyer1.
Abstract
Objectives: The objective of this systematic review was to synthetize the published data on the relationships between elevated blood C-reactive protein (CRP) levels and schizophrenia (SZ) onset risk, illness characteristics and treatments, cognition and physical health. Method: The systematic bibliographic searches have been carried out according to the Cochrane methodology. Medline, web of science, Google Scholar with each database being searched from inception to November 2017.Entities:
Keywords: C-reactive protein (CRP); cognition; nicotine dependence; onset risk; peripheral biomarker; physical health; schizophrenia
Year: 2018 PMID: 30190688 PMCID: PMC6115522 DOI: 10.3389/fpsyt.2018.00392
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Psychiatry ISSN: 1664-0640 Impact factor: 4.157
Studies exploring relationships between C-reactive protein (CRP) blood levels and schizophrenia (SZ): designs and major findings.
| Metcalf | 2017 | Prospective | 6,362 HC 15–16 years adolescents | Using CRP as a categorical variable, those with high (>3 mg/L) compared with low (<1 mg/L) CRP levels at baseline were more likely to develop SZ; adjusted OR 4.25 (95% CI, 1.30–13.93). |
| Prins | 2016 | Genetic cross-sectional study | >25,000 SZ >30,000 controls from populations of European ancestry | Genetically elevated CRP levels showed a significant potentially protective causal relationship with SZ risk. |
| Inoshita | 2016 | Control study and meta-analysis | 418 SZ | Serum CRP levels were significantly higher in SZ patients than in the controls. |
| Aymaropoulos | 2015 | Case-control | 460 SZ 241 HC | CRP levels were significantly higher in SZ subjects but smoking and BMI were not controlled. |
| Khandaker | 2014 | Prospective cohort study | 4,500 children | While higher levels of the systemic inflammatory marker IL-6 in childhood are associated with an increased risk of developing depression and psychosis in young adulthood, the results were non-significant for CRP. |
| Wium-Andersen | 2014 | Prospective cohort study | 78,810 HC | Baseline elevated plasma CRP was associated with a 6- to 11-fold increased risk of late- and very-late-onset schizophrenia in the general population. |
| Joshi | 2014 | Case-control | 45 SZ 41 HC | The Schizophrenia subjects showed statistically significant increased hs-CRP values. |
| Dickerson | 2013 | Case-control | 295 SZ 228 HC | The individuals with schizophrenia had significantly increased odds of having elevated levels of CRP relative to both the 75th and 90th percentile levels of the controls after adjustment for age, gender, race, maternal education, smoking status, and BMI. |
| Lin | 2013 | Case-control | 36 SZ 36 matched HC | Ancova adjusted for age and BMI revealed a significant increase in the hsCRP levels in the schizophrenic group (1.4 mg/L, SD = 1.5 mg/L) in comparison with the control group (0.9 mg/L, SD = 1.4 mg/L; |
| Fawzi | 2011 | Case-control | 200 SZ antipsychotic-free 200 HC | In Egyptian men, waist circumference and SZ diagnosis were strong predictors of raised CRP levels independently of a number of potentially confounding variables. In antipsychotic-free SZ patients, CRP level was higher than in HC and is positively correlated with negative symptomatology as measured by the PANSS. |
| Suvisaai | 2011 | Case-control | 45 SZ 57 ONAP 37 affective psychosis matched controls | SZ subjects had significantly higher CRP blood levels. CRP was influenced by both antipsychotic medication and nonaffective psychosis. |
| Zakharyan | 2010 | Case-control genetic | 103 SZ 105 HC | None of the CRP rs1417938, rs1800947, rs1205 variants was associated with schizophrenia. |
| Hope | 2009 | Case-control | 186 SZ 244 HC | There were no differences in CRP blood levels between the groups. |
| Aas | 2017 | Case-control | 148 SZ and 123 BD vs. 212 HC | Patients had increased levels of hs-CRP ( |
| Hartwig | 2017 | Two-sample mendelian randomization | >30,000 SZ >45,000 HC | The pooled odds ratio estimate using 18 CRP genetic instruments was 0.90 (random effects 95% CI, 0.84–0.97; |
| Wang | 2017 | Meta-analysis | 1,963 SZ 3,683 HC | Compared with non-SZs, blood CRP levels were moderately increased in SZ (SMD 0.53, 95% CI 0.30–0.76) irrespectively of study region, sample size of included studies, patient mean age, age of SZ onset and patient body mass index. Patients in Asia or Africa ( |
| Christiano | 2017 | Cross-sectional | 35 SZ | CRP levels were higher in cases with greater disease severity. |
| Frydecka | 2015 | Case-control | 151 SZ 154 HC | hsCRP were higher in SZ subjects compared to HC. hsCRP levels were associated with insidious psychosis onset, duration of illness and chronic schizophrenia course with deterioration. |
| Devaranayanan | 2017 | Case-control | 40 SZ 40 HC | Hs-CRP levels were not associated with the disease severity. |
| Faugere | 2017 | Cross-sectional | 307 SZ | In multivariate analyses, patients with abnormal CRP levels [>3 mg/L, |
| Fond | 2016 | Cross-sectional | 219 SZ | Overall, 43 (20.1%) of the subjects received a diagnosis of comorbid current depression, and 51 (31.9%) had ongoing antidepressant treatment. Abnormal CRP levels in schizophrenia [>3 mg/L, |
| Barzilay | 2016 | Cross-sectional | 213 SZ | Inpatients with elevated CRP (>1 mg/L) displayed increased aggressive behavior compared to patients with normal CRP levels. |
| Joseph | 2015 | Case-control | 88 SZ 71 HC | hs-CRP levels were significantly higher in individuals with SZ than in comparison subjects. Higher hs-CRP levels in the SZ group were associated with female gender, more severe negative symptoms, greater medical comorbidity, and worse metabolic risk factors including BMI, fasting glucose, and hemoglobin A1c levels. hs-CRP was not related to age, race, education, smoking status, antipsychotic dosage, or cognitive impairment. |
| Fernandes | 2016 | Meta-analysis (26 studies) | >85,000 subjects | CRP levels were moderately increased in persons with SZ regardless of the use of antipsychotics and did not change between the first episode of psychosis and with progression of SZ ( |
| Faugere | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 256 SZ | After adjusting for key socio-demographic and clinical confounding factors, patients with high levels of CRP (>3 mg/L) had a lower QoL than patients with normal CRP levels (OR = 0.97, 95% CI = 0.94–0.99). An investigation of the dimensions of QoL revealed that psychological well-being, physical well-being and sentimental life were the most salient features of QoL associated with CRP. Significant associations were found between lower educational level (OR = 4.15, 95% CI = 1.55–11.07), higher BMI (OR = 1.16, 95% CI = 1.06–1.28), higher Fagerström score (OR = 1.22, 95% CI = 1.01–1.47) and high levels of CRP. |
| Sobis | 2015 | Interventional | 17 SZ | After 28 days of aripiprazole treatment a significant reduction in hsCRP has been detected ( |
| Micoulaud-Franchi | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 55 SZ outpatients | Abnormal CRP [>3 mg/L, |
| Wyzokinski | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 485 SZ | Increased CRP level (>3 mg/L, 35.7%) was associated with age and female gender. |
| Meyer | 2009 | 3 months Follow-up interventional (CATIE study) | 789 SZ | There were significant treatment differences in CRP at 3 months of antipsychotic treatment, with a differential impact of baseline values. In overall comparisons, quetiapine and olanzapine had the highest median levels for CRP. In those with low baseline CRP (< 1 mg/L), olanzapine was significantly different than perphenazine ( |
| Akanji | 2009 | Case-control | 207 SZ 165 HC | SZ subjects had significantly greater serum concentrations of hsCRP. There were significant associations between hsCRP and (i) age in both groups; (ii) BMI in HC but not in SZ. In the latter, hsCRP levels were: (a) marginally higher in women with later age of disease onset; (ii) highest with remission and with catatonic features; and (iii) lower with family history of psychosis. |
| Carrizo | 2008 | Case-control | 88 SZ 34 first-degree relatives | The typical AP group had the highest CRP level ( |
| Baptista | 2007 | 16 weeks follow-up Interventional | 60 SZ inpatients with chronic severe illness | CRP levels significantly increased after olanzapine switch as well as metabolic markers. |
| Fan | 2007 | Cross-sectional | 26 SZ | Subjects with CRP >5 mg/L ( |
| Dorofeikova | 2017 | Cross-sectional | 125 SZ inpatients | Thought disorders were more pronounced in patients with CRP levels >3 mg/L [ |
| Bulzacka | 2016 | Cross-sectional | 369 SZ outpatients | Multiple factor analysis revealed that abnormal CRP levels [>3 mg/L, |
| Johnsen | 2016 | interventional | 124 SZ inpatients at admittance | There was an inverse relationship between overall cognitive performance and CRP level at admittance. |
| Dickerson | 2013 | Case-control | 295 SZ outpatients | There was an inverse relationship between CRP levels and performance on RBANS total ( |
| Garcia-rizo | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 62 antipsychotic-naïve SZ patients | CRP levels were significantly higher in the deficit patients (3 vs.2 mg/l). |
| Dickerson | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 413 SZ outpatients | The risks of decreased cognitive functioning associated with HSV-1 exposure and elevated levels of CRP were independent and additive. There was no effect of HSV-1 exposure and CRP levels on the severity of symptoms as measured by the PANSS (all |
| Dickerson | 2007 | Cross-sectional | 413 SZ outpatients | Elevated serum levels of C-reactive protein in schizophrenia are associated with the severity of cognitive impairment but not of psychiatric symptoms. |
| Horsdal | 2017 | Cross-cohort | 17,314 | Elevated CRP levels were associated with increased all-cause mortality by adjusted HRs of 1.56 (95% CI: 1.02–2.38) for levels 3–10 mg/L and 2.07 (95% CI: 1.30–3.29) for levels above 10 mg/L compared to individuals with levels below 3 mg/L. |
| Fond | 2017 | Cross-sectional | 345 SZ | CRP levels ≥ 3 mg/L were associated with severe nicotine dependence (29 vs. 15%, OR = 2.8, |
| Lally | 2016 | Cross-sectional | 324 SZ outpatients | Accounting for age, gender, ethnicity and season of sampling, serum 25-OHD levels were negatively correlated with waist circumference ( |
| Stubbs | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 250 SZ | Higher sedentary behavior (β = 0.155, |
| Popovic | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 93 SZ long-term inpatients | Elevated CRP was identified as a predictor of metabolic syndrome independently of diabetes mellitus in family history, BMI > 25 kg/m2, and hyperlipidemia in family history ( |
| Mori | 2015 | Interventional (CATIE study) | 1,450 SZ | After controlling for potential confounders, blood CRP, interleukin-6, and leptin were significant predictors of all five individual components of the metabolic syndrome (as both continuous and categorical outcome measures). |
| Zhu | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 93 SZ 93 family-matched HC | Mean levels of CRP and 25(OH)D were 43.3% higher and 26.7% lower for patients compared to controls, respectively. 25(OH)D were inversely associated with CRP in the patients, but not in the controls. |
| Fawzi | 2015 | Cross-sectional | 100 SZ | In a multiple regression analysis, total energy intake and BMI emerged as the main independent predictors of deterioration in most inflammatory and psychopathology parameters. |
| Klemettila | 2014 | Cross-sectional | 190 resistant SZ | hs-CRP was associated with obesity after controlling for age and smoking. |
| Severance | 2013 | Cross-sectional | 141 SZ 78 HC | The serological surrogate markers of bacterial translocation (soluble CD14 and lipopolysaccharide binding protein) were both significantly correlated with CRP [ |
| Vuksan-Cusa | 2013 | Cross-sectional | 60 BD+ 62 SZ 59 HC | In the patient group, CRP was correlated with waist circumference and diastolic blood pressure. Elevated CRP was not a significant predictor of MetS ( |
| Dieset | 2012 | Cross-sectional | 361 SZ | After adjusting for confounders: BMI, triglycerides and glucose were associated with increased hsCRP ( |
| Sicras-Mainar | 2013 | Cross-sectional | 705 SZ spectrum disorder | After adjusting for age, gender, smoking and presence of neoplasm or inflammatory diseases, CRP was linearly associated with 10-years CVD risk stratified by risk (low, moderate, high/very high): respectively, 2.3 (95% CI: 2.1–2.5), 3.1 (2.6–3.5) and 3.7 (3.2–4.1) mg/L; |
| Vuksan-Cusa | 2010 | Cross-sectional | 63 SZ | The prevalence of the MetS was 37%. CRP > 5 mg/L was significantly associated with the presence of MetS. |
BD, bipolar disorder; ONAP, other non-affective psychoses; SGA, second generation antipsychotic; MetS, metabolic syndrome; BMI, body mass index.
Figure 1Study selection process (PRISMA flow diagram).