Katherine Jonas1, Sean Clouston2, Kaiqiao Li3, Laura J Fochtmann4, Todd Lencz5, Anil K Malhotra5, David Cicero6, Greg Perlman7, Evelyn J Bromet8, Roman Kotov7. 1. Department of Psychiatry, Stony Brook University, United States of America. Electronic address: Katherine.jonas@stonybrookmedicine.edu. 2. Department of Family, Population and Preventive Medicine, Core Faculty, Program in Public Health, Stony Brook University, United States of America. 3. Department of Applied Mathematics and Statistics, Stony Brook University, United States of America. 4. Department of Psychiatry, Stony Brook University, United States of America; Department of Pharmacological Sciences, Department of Biomedical Informatics, Stony Brook University, United States of America. 5. Departments of Psychiatry and Molecular Medicine, Donald and Barbara Zucker School of Medicine at Hofstra/Northwell, United States of America; Division of Psychiatry Research, Zucker Hillside Hospital, Northwell Health, United States of America; Center for Psychiatric Neuroscience, Feinstein Institute for Medical Research, United States of America. 6. Department of Psychology, University of Hawaii at Manoa, United States of America. 7. Department of Psychiatry, Stony Brook University, United States of America. 8. Department of Psychiatry, Stony Brook University, United States of America; Department of Family, Population & Preventive Medicine, Stony Brook University, United States of America.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Research on a putative link between apolipoprotein-ε4 allele (APOE-ε4) and schizophrenia has been inconclusive. However, prior studies have not investigated the association between APOE-ε4 and symptom trajectories, nor has the existing literature taken into account the potentially moderating effect of age in genetic association studies. METHODS: The association between APOE-ε4 and four symptom dimensions was investigated in a longitudinal study of 116 individuals with schizophrenia initially assessed during their first admission for psychosis and evaluated five times over the following 20years. A meta-analysis identified 29 case-control studies of APOE-ε4 allele frequency in schizophrenia, which were analyzed using random-effects meta-regression to test the potentially moderating effect of age. RESULTS: Longitudinal models identified a specific association between APOE-ε4 and symptom trajectories, showing that APOE-ε4 portends worsening severity of hallucinations and delusions in late adulthood among people with schizophrenia, at a rate of a 0.46 standard deviation increase per decade. Meta-analysis showed a significant effect of age: the association between APOE-ε4 and schizophrenia was not detectable in younger people but became pronounced with age, such that APOE-ε4 increased the odds of diagnosis by 10% per decade. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, the meta-analysis and longitudinal analysis implicate APOE-ε4 as an age-related risk factor for worsening hallucinations and delusions, and suggest APOE-ε4 may play an age-mediated pathophysiological role in schizophrenia. The presence of an APOE-ε4 allele may also identify a subgroup of patients who require intensive monitoring and additional targeted interventions, especially in mid-to late-life.
BACKGROUND: Research on a putative link between apolipoprotein-ε4 allele (APOE-ε4) and schizophrenia has been inconclusive. However, prior studies have not investigated the association between APOE-ε4 and symptom trajectories, nor has the existing literature taken into account the potentially moderating effect of age in genetic association studies. METHODS: The association between APOE-ε4 and four symptom dimensions was investigated in a longitudinal study of 116 individuals with schizophrenia initially assessed during their first admission for psychosis and evaluated five times over the following 20years. A meta-analysis identified 29 case-control studies of APOE-ε4 allele frequency in schizophrenia, which were analyzed using random-effects meta-regression to test the potentially moderating effect of age. RESULTS: Longitudinal models identified a specific association between APOE-ε4 and symptom trajectories, showing that APOE-ε4 portends worsening severity of hallucinations and delusions in late adulthood among people with schizophrenia, at a rate of a 0.46 standard deviation increase per decade. Meta-analysis showed a significant effect of age: the association between APOE-ε4 and schizophrenia was not detectable in younger people but became pronounced with age, such that APOE-ε4 increased the odds of diagnosis by 10% per decade. CONCLUSIONS: Taken together, the meta-analysis and longitudinal analysis implicate APOE-ε4 as an age-related risk factor for worsening hallucinations and delusions, and suggest APOE-ε4 may play an age-mediated pathophysiological role in schizophrenia. The presence of an APOE-ε4 allele may also identify a subgroup of patients who require intensive monitoring and additional targeted interventions, especially in mid-to late-life.
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