Literature DB >> 33543752

Heterogeneity and Classification of Recent Onset Psychosis and Depression: A Multimodal Machine Learning Approach.

Paris Alexandros Lalousis1,2, Stephen J Wood1,3,4, Lianne Schmaal3,4, Katharine Chisholm1,5, Sian Lowri Griffiths1,2, Renate L E P Reniers1,2,6, Alessandro Bertolino7, Stefan Borgwardt8,9, Paolo Brambilla10,11, Joseph Kambeitz12, Rebekka Lencer13, Christos Pantelis14, Stephan Ruhrmann15, Raimo K R Salokangas16, Frauke Schultze-Lutter17,18,19, Carolina Bonivento20, Dominic Dwyer12, Adele Ferro11, Theresa Haidl15, Marlene Rosen15, Andre Schmidt8, Eva Meisenzahl17, Nikolaos Koutsouleris12, Rachel Upthegrove1,2,21.   

Abstract

Diagnostic heterogeneity within and across psychotic and affective disorders challenges accurate treatment selection, particularly in the early stages. Delineation of shared and distinct illness features at the phenotypic and brain levels may inform the development of more precise differential diagnostic tools. We aimed to identify prototypes of depression and psychosis to investigate their heterogeneity, with common, comorbid transdiagnostic symptoms. Analyzing clinical/neurocognitive and grey matter volume (GMV) data from the PRONIA database, we generated prototypic models of recent-onset depression (ROD) vs. recent-onset psychosis (ROP) by training support-vector machines to separate patients with ROD from patients with ROP, who were selected for absent comorbid features (pure groups). Then, models were applied to patients with comorbidity, ie, ROP with depressive symptoms (ROP+D) and ROD participants with sub-threshold psychosis-like features (ROD+P), to measure their positions within the affective-psychotic continuum. All models were independently validated in a replication sample. Comorbid patients were positioned between pure groups, with ROP+D patients being more frequently classified as ROD compared to pure ROP patients (clinical/neurocognitive model: χ2 = 14.874; P < .001; GMV model: χ2 = 4.933; P = .026). ROD+P patient classification did not differ from ROD (clinical/neurocognitive model: χ2 = 1.956; P = 0.162; GMV model: χ2 = 0.005; P = .943). Clinical/neurocognitive and neuroanatomical models demonstrated separability of prototypic depression from psychosis. The shift of comorbid patients toward the depression prototype, observed at the clinical and biological levels, suggests that psychosis with affective comorbidity aligns more strongly to depressive rather than psychotic disease processes. Future studies should assess how these quantitative measures of comorbidity predict outcomes and individual responses to stratified therapeutic interventions.
© The Author(s) 2021. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Maryland Psychiatric Research Center.All rights reserved. For permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  MRI; comorbidity; depression; gray matter volume; machine learning; psychosis; transdiagnostic

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 33543752      PMCID: PMC8266654          DOI: 10.1093/schbul/sbaa185

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Schizophr Bull        ISSN: 0586-7614            Impact factor:   9.306


  49 in total

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4.  The Psychopathology and Neuroanatomical Markers of Depression in Early Psychosis.

Authors:  Rachel Upthegrove; Paris Lalousis; Pavan Mallikarjun; Katharine Chisholm; Sian Lowri Griffiths; Mariam Iqbal; Mirabel Pelton; Renate Reniers; Alexandra Stainton; Marlene Rosen; Anne Ruef; Dominic B Dwyer; Marian Surman; Theresa Haidl; Nora Penzel; Lana Kambeitz-Llankovic; Alessandro Bertolino; Paolo Brambilla; Stefan Borgwardt; Joseph Kambeitz; Rebekka Lencer; Christos Pantelis; Stephan Ruhrmann; Frauke Schultze-Lutter; Raimo K R Salokangas; Eva Meisenzahl; Stephen J Wood; Nikolaos Koutsouleris
Journal:  Schizophr Bull       Date:  2021-01-23       Impact factor: 9.306

Review 5.  Machine Learning Approaches for Clinical Psychology and Psychiatry.

Authors:  Dominic B Dwyer; Peter Falkai; Nikolaos Koutsouleris
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Journal:  Psychol Med       Date:  2018-10-04       Impact factor: 7.723

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