4.5 Article

Detection of advanced brain aging in schizophrenia and its structural underpinning by using normative brain age metrics

Journal

NEUROIMAGE-CLINICAL
Volume 34, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.nicl.2022.103003

Keywords

Brain age; Schizophrenia; Magnetic resonance imaging; Multimodality; Normative model; Machine learning

Categories

Funding

  1. National Health Research Institute (NHRI) Taiwan [NHRI-EX109-10928NI]
  2. Taiwan Ministry of Science and Technology [106-2314-B-002-242-MY3]
  3. National Taiwan University [NTUCC-110L892704]

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Conceptualizing mental disorders as deviations from normative functioning provides a statistical perspective for understanding individual heterogeneity. This study introduces a novel brain age metric based on imaging-derived brain age paradigm combined with normative modeling to investigate advanced brain aging in schizophrenia. The results demonstrate that normative brain age metrics can detect advanced brain aging and associated clinical and neuroanatomical features in schizophrenia.
Conceptualizing mental disorders as deviations from normative functioning provides a statistical perspective for understanding the individual heterogeneity underlying psychiatric disorders. To broaden the understanding of the idiosyncrasy of brain aging in schizophrenia, we introduced an imaging-derived brain age paradigm combined with normative modeling as novel brain age metrics. We constructed brain age models based on GM, WM, and their combination (multimodality) features of 482 normal participants. The normalized predicted age difference (nPAD) was estimated in 147 individuals with schizophrenia and their 130 demographically matched controls through normative models of brain age metrics and compared between the groups. Regression analyses were also performed to investigate the associations of nPAD with illness duration, onset age, symptom severity, and intelligence quotient. Finally, regional contributions to advanced brain aging in schizophrenia were investigated. The results showed that the individuals exhibited significantly higher nPAD (P < 0.001), indicating advanced normative brain age than the normal controls in GM, WM, and multimodality models. The nPAD measure based on WM was positively associated with the negative symptom score (P = 0.009), and negatively associated with the intelligence quotient (P = 0.039) and onset age (P = 0.006). The imaging features that contributed to nPAD mostly involved the prefrontal, temporal, and parietal lobes, especially the precuneus and uncinate fasciculus. This study demonstrates that normative brain age metrics could detect advanced brain aging and associated clinical and neuroanatomical features in schizophrenia. The proposed nPAD measures may be useful to investigate aberrant brain aging in mental disorders and their brain-phenotype relationships.

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