The Association Between Familial Risk and Brain Abnormalities Is Disease Specific: An ENIGMA-Relatives Study of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder

Publication date

2019-10-01

Authors

de Zwarte, Sonja M.C.
Brouwer, Rachel MISNI 0000000389353779
Agartz, Ingrid
Alda, Martin
Aleman, André
Alpert, Kathryn I
Bearden, Carrie E
Bertolino, Alessandro
Bois, Catherine
Bonvino, Aurora

Editors

Advisors

Supervisors

Document Type

Article

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License

cc_by_nc_nd

Abstract

Background: Schizophrenia and bipolar disorder share genetic liability, and some structural brain abnormalities are common to both conditions. First-degree relatives of patients with schizophrenia (FDRs-SZ) show similar brain abnormalities to patients, albeit with smaller effect sizes. Imaging findings in first-degree relatives of patients with bipolar disorder (FDRs-BD) have been inconsistent in the past, but recent studies report regionally greater volumes compared with control subjects. Methods: We performed a meta-analysis of global and subcortical brain measures of 6008 individuals (1228 FDRs-SZ, 852 FDRs-BD, 2246 control subjects, 1016 patients with schizophrenia, 666 patients with bipolar disorder) from 34 schizophrenia and/or bipolar disorder family cohorts with standardized methods. Analyses were repeated with a correction for intracranial volume (ICV) and for the presence of any psychopathology in the relatives and control subjects. Results: FDRs-BD had significantly larger ICV (d = +0.16, q <.05 corrected), whereas FDRs-SZ showed smaller thalamic volumes than control subjects (d = −0.12, q <.05 corrected). ICV explained the enlargements in the brain measures in FDRs-BD. In FDRs-SZ, after correction for ICV, total brain, cortical gray matter, cerebral white matter, cerebellar gray and white matter, and thalamus volumes were significantly smaller; the cortex was thinner (d < −0.09, q <.05 corrected); and third ventricle was larger (d = +0.15, q <.05 corrected). The findings were not explained by psychopathology in the relatives or control subjects. Conclusions: Despite shared genetic liability, FDRs-SZ and FDRs-BD show a differential pattern of structural brain abnormalities, specifically a divergent effect in ICV. This may imply that the neurodevelopmental trajectories leading to brain anomalies in schizophrenia or bipolar disorder are distinct.

Keywords

Bipolar disorder, Familial risk, Imaging, Meta-analysis, Neurodevelopment, Schizophrenia, Biological Psychiatry, Journal Article

Citation

de Zwarte, S M C, Brouwer, R M, Agartz, I, Alda, M, Aleman, A, Alpert, K I, Bearden, C E, Bertolino, A, Bois, C, Bonvino, A, Bramon, E, Buimer, E E L, Cahn, W, Cannon, D M, Cannon, T D, Caseras, X, Castro-Fornieles, J, Chen, Q, Chung, Y, De la Serna, E, Di Giorgio, A, Doucet, G E, Eker, M C, Erk, S, Fears, S C, Foley, S F, Frangou, S, Frankland, A, Fullerton, J M, Glahn, D C, Goghari, V M, Goldman, A L, Gonul, A S, Gruber, O, de Haan, L, Hajek, T, Hawkins, E L, Heinz, A, Hillegers, M H J, Hulshoff Pol, H, Hultman, C M, Ingvar, M, Johansson, V, Jönsson, E G, Kane, F, Kempton, M J, Koenis, M M G, van Os, J, Kahn, R, van Haren, N E M & ENIGMA Relatives Working Group 2019, 'The Association Between Familial Risk and Brain Abnormalities Is Disease Specific : An ENIGMA-Relatives Study of Schizophrenia and Bipolar Disorder', Biological Psychiatry, vol. 86, no. 7, pp. 545-556. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.biopsych.2019.03.985