| Literature DB >> 33431852 |
Abraham Nunes1,2, William Stone2, Raffaella Ardau3, Anne Berghöfer4, Alberto Bocchetta3, Caterina Chillotti3, Valeria Deiana5, Franziska Degenhardt6, Andreas J Forstner6,7,8, Julie S Garnham1, Eva Grof9,10, Tomas Hajek1, Mirko Manchia11,12, Manuel Mattheisen13, Francis McMahon14, Bruno Müller-Oerlinghausen15, Markus M Nöthen6, Marco Pinna16, Claudia Pisanu5, Claire O'Donovan1, Marcella D C Rietschel17, Guy Rouleau18, Thomas Schulze19, Giovanni Severino5, Claire M Slaney1, Alessio Squassina5, Aleksandra Suwalska20,21, Gustavo Turecki22, Rudolf Uher1, Petr Zvolsky23, Pablo Cervantes22, Maria Del Zompo5, Paul Grof9,10, Janusz Rybakowski20,24, Leonardo Tondo16,25, Thomas Trappenberg2, Martin Alda26.
Abstract
Predicting lithium response (LiR) in bipolar disorder (BD) may inform treatment planning, but phenotypic heterogeneity complicates discovery of genomic markers. We hypothesized that patients with "exemplary phenotypes"-those whose clinical features are reliably associated with LiR and non-response (LiNR)-are more genetically separable than those with less exemplary phenotypes. Using clinical data collected from people with BD (n = 1266 across 7 centers; 34.7% responders), we computed a "clinical exemplar score," which measures the degree to which a subject's clinical phenotype is reliably predictive of LiR/LiNR. For patients whose genotypes were available (n = 321), we evaluated whether a subgroup of responders/non-responders with the top 25% of clinical exemplar scores (the "best clinical exemplars") were more accurately classified based on genetic data, compared to a subgroup with the lowest 25% of clinical exemplar scores (the "poor clinical exemplars"). On average, the best clinical exemplars of LiR had a later illness onset, completely episodic clinical course, absence of rapid cycling and psychosis, and few psychiatric comorbidities. The best clinical exemplars of LiR and LiNR were genetically separable with an area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of 0.88 (IQR [0.83, 0.98]), compared to 0.66 [0.61, 0.80] (p = 0.0032) among poor clinical exemplars. Variants in the Alzheimer's amyloid-secretase pathway, along with G-protein-coupled receptor, muscarinic acetylcholine, and histamine H1R signaling pathways were informative predictors. This study must be replicated on larger samples and extended to predict response to other mood stabilizers.Entities:
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Year: 2021 PMID: 33431852 PMCID: PMC7801503 DOI: 10.1038/s41398-020-01148-y
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Transl Psychiatry ISSN: 2158-3188 Impact factor: 6.222