4.7 Article

Neurobiologically Based Stratification of Recent- Onset Depression and Psychosis: Identification of Two Distinct Transdiagnostic Phenotypes

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 92, Issue 7, Pages 552-562

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.03.021

Keywords

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Funding

  1. European Union
  2. Medical Research Council
  3. National Institute for Health Research
  4. European Commission-Research
  5. Sunovion
  6. Koeln Fortune Program/Faculty of Medicine, University of Cologne
  7. [602152]
  8. [370/2020]

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By analyzing structural neuroimaging data, researchers have identified two transdiagnostic neuroanatomically informed clusters among patients with recent-onset depression and psychosis. These clusters are clinically and biologically distinct, challenging current diagnostic boundaries and improving predictive accuracy for symptomatic remission.
BACKGROUND: Identifying neurobiologically based transdiagnostic categories of depression and psychosis may elucidate heterogeneity and provide better candidates for predictive modeling. We aimed to identify clusters across patients with recent-onset depression (ROD) and recent-onset psychosis (ROP) based on structural neuroimaging data. We hypothesized that these transdiagnostic clusters would identify patients with poor outcome and allow more accurate prediction of symptomatic remission than traditional diagnostic structures.METHODS: HYDRA (Heterogeneity through Discriminant Analysis) was trained on whole-brain volumetric measures from 577 participants from the discovery sample of the multisite PRONIA study to identify neurobiologically driven clusters, which were then externally validated in the PRONIA replication sample (n = 404) and three datasets of chronic samples (Centre for Biomedical Research Excellence, n = 146; Mind Clinical Imaging Consortium, n = 202; Munich, n = 470).RESULTS: The optimal clustering solution was two transdiagnostic clusters (cluster 1: n = 153, 67 ROP, 86 ROD; cluster 2: n = 149, 88 ROP, 61 ROD; adjusted Rand index = 0.618). The two clusters contained both patients with ROP and patients with ROD. One cluster had widespread gray matter volume deficits and more positive, negative, and functional deficits (impaired cluster), and one cluster revealed a more preserved neuroanatomical signature and more core depressive symptomatology (preserved cluster). The clustering solution was internally and externally validated and assessed for clinical utility in predicting 9-month symptomatic remission, outperforming traditional diagnostic structures.CONCLUSIONS: We identified two transdiagnostic neuroanatomically informed clusters that are clinically and bio-logically distinct, challenging current diagnostic boundaries in recent-onset mental health disorders. These results may aid understanding of the etiology of poor outcome patients transdiagnostically and improve development of stratified treatments.

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