4.6 Article

Cohort profile: SUPER-Finland - the Finnish study for hereditary mechanisms of psychotic disorders

Journal

BMJ OPEN
Volume 13, Issue 4, Pages -

Publisher

BMJ PUBLISHING GROUP
DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2022-070710

Keywords

PSYCHIATRY; Schizophrenia & psychotic disorders; Depression & mood disorders

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The purpose of this study is to establish a large Finnish collection of psychosis cases, including diverse populations from Asia, Latin America, and Africa, in addition to known population isolates like Finland. A total of 10,474 individuals aged 18 years or older were recruited and genotyped. The future plans of this study include investigating the effects of common variants, rare variants, and copy number variations on the severity of psychotic illness, as well as tracking the longitudinal course of illness based on nationwide register data.
PurposeSUPER-Finland is a large Finnish collection of psychosis cases. This cohort also represents the Finnish contribution to the Stanley Global Neuropsychiatric Genetics Initiative, which seeks to diversify genetic sample collection to include Asian, Latin American and African populations in addition to known population isolates, such as Finland.Participants10474 individuals aged 18 years or older were recruited throughout the country. The subjects have been genotyped with a genome-wide genotyping chip and exome sequenced. A subset of 897 individuals selected from known population sub-isolates were selected for whole-genome sequencing. Recruitment was done between November 2015 and December 2018.Findings to date5757 (55.2%) had a diagnosis of schizophrenia, 944 (9.1%) schizoaffective disorder, 1612 (15.5%) type I or type II bipolar disorder, 532 (5.1 %) psychotic depression, 1047 (10.0%) other psychosis and for 530 (5.1%) self-reported psychosis at recruitment could not be confirmed from register data. Mean duration of schizophrenia was 22.0 years at the time of the recruitment. By the end of the year 2018, 204 of the recruited individuals had died. The most common cause of death was cardiovascular disease (n=61) followed by neoplasms (n=40). Ten subjects had psychiatric morbidity as the primary cause of death.Future plansCompare the effects of common variants, rare variants and copy number variations (CNVs) on severity of psychotic illness. In addition, we aim to track longitudinal course of illness based on nation-wide register data to estimate how phenotypic and genetic differences alter it.

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