Psychiatry - Research Publications

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    Plasma neurofilament light chain protein is not increased in treatment-resistant schizophrenia and first-degree relatives
    Eratne, D ; Janelidze, S ; Malpas, CB ; Loi, S ; Walterfane, M ; Merritt, A ; Diouf, I ; Blennow, K ; Zetterberg, H ; Cilia, B ; Warman, C ; Bousman, C ; Everall, I ; Zalesky, A ; Jayaram, M ; Thomas, N ; Berkovic, SF ; Hansson, O ; Velakoulis, D ; Pantelis, C ; Santillo, A (SAGE PUBLICATIONS LTD, 2022-10)
    OBJECTIVE: Schizophrenia, a complex psychiatric disorder, is often associated with cognitive, neurological and neuroimaging abnormalities. The processes underlying these abnormalities, and whether a subset of people with schizophrenia have a neuroprogressive or neurodegenerative component to schizophrenia, remain largely unknown. Examining fluid biomarkers of diverse types of neuronal damage could increase our understanding of these processes, as well as potentially provide clinically useful biomarkers, for example with assisting with differentiation from progressive neurodegenerative disorders such as Alzheimer and frontotemporal dementias. METHODS: This study measured plasma neurofilament light chain protein (NfL) using ultrasensitive Simoa technology, to investigate the degree of neuronal injury in a well-characterised cohort of people with treatment-resistant schizophrenia on clozapine (n = 82), compared to first-degree relatives (an at-risk group, n = 37), people with schizophrenia not treated with clozapine (n = 13), and age- and sex-matched controls (n = 59). RESULTS: We found no differences in NfL levels between treatment-resistant schizophrenia (mean NfL, M = 6.3 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.5, 7.2]), first-degree relatives (siblings, M = 6.7 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.2, 8.2]; parents, M after adjusting for age = 6.7 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [4.7, 8.8]), controls (M = 5.8 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [5.3, 6.3]) and not treated with clozapine (M = 4.9 pg/mL, 95% confidence interval: [4.0, 5.8]). Exploratory, hypothesis-generating analyses found weak correlations in treatment-resistant schizophrenia, between NfL and clozapine levels (Spearman's r = 0.258, 95% confidence interval: [0.034, 0.457]), dyslipidaemia (r = 0.280, 95% confidence interval: [0.064, 0.470]) and a negative correlation with weight (r = -0.305, 95% confidence interval: [-0.504, -0.076]). CONCLUSION: Treatment-resistant schizophrenia does not appear to be associated with neuronal, particularly axonal degeneration. Further studies are warranted to investigate the utility of NfL to differentiate treatment-resistant schizophrenia from neurodegenerative disorders such as behavioural variant frontotemporal dementia, and to explore NfL in other stages of schizophrenia such as the prodome and first episode.
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    Disruptions in white matter microstructure associated with impaired visual associative memory in schizophrenia-spectrum illness
    Wannan, CMJ ; Bartholomeusz, CF ; Pantelis, C ; Di Biase, MA ; Syeda, WT ; Chakravarty, MM ; Bousman, CA ; Everall, IP ; McGorry, PD ; Zalesky, A ; Cropley, VL (SPRINGER HEIDELBERG, 2022-09-01)
    Episodic memory ability relies on hippocampal-prefrontal connectivity. However, few studies have examined relationships between memory performance and white matter (WM) microstructure in hippocampal-prefrontal pathways in schizophrenia-spectrum disorder (SSDs). Here, we investigated these relationships in individuals with first-episode psychosis (FEP) and chronic schizophrenia-spectrum disorders (SSDs) using tractography analysis designed to interrogate the microstructure of WM tracts in the hippocampal-prefrontal pathway. Measures of WM microstructure (fractional anisotropy [FA], radial diffusivity [RD], and axial diffusivity [AD]) were obtained for 47 individuals with chronic SSDs, 28 FEP individuals, 52 older healthy controls, and 27 younger healthy controls. Tractography analysis was performed between the hippocampus and three targets involved in hippocampal-prefrontal connectivity (thalamus, amygdala, nucleus accumbens). Measures of WM microstructure were then examined in relation to episodic memory performance separately across each group. Both those with FEP and chronic SSDs demonstrated impaired episodic memory performance. However, abnormal WM microstructure was only observed in individuals with chronic SSDs. Abnormal WM microstructure in the hippocampal-thalamic pathway in the right hemisphere was associated with poorer memory performance in individuals with chronic SSDs. These findings suggest that disruptions in WM microstructure in the hippocampal-prefrontal pathway may contribute to memory impairments in individuals with chronic SSDs but not FEP.
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    FRONTOSTRIATAL CONNECTIVITY IN TREATMENT-RESISTANT SCHIZOPHRENIA: RELATIONSHIP TO POSITIVE SYMPTOMS AND COGNITIVE FLEXIBILITY
    Cropley, V ; Ganella, E ; Wannan, C ; Zalesky, A ; Van Rheenen, T ; Bousman, C ; Everall, I ; Fornito, A ; Pantelis, C (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2018-04)
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    S187. EXPLORING NEURODEVELOPMENTAL AND FAMILIAL ORIGINS OF NEUROLOGICAL SOFT SIGNS IN SCHIZOPHRENIA
    Cooper, R ; Van Rheenen, T ; Zalesky, A ; Wannan, C ; Wang, Y ; Bousman, C ; Everall, I ; Pantelis, C ; Cropley, V (Oxford University Press (OUP), 2020-05-18)
    Abstract Background The neurodevelopmental hypothesis is the most widely regarded framework for understanding the development of schizophrenia. One of the most commonly cited pieces of evidence for this theory is the presence of neurological soft signs (NSS) in individuals prior to the onset of psychosis. Increased NSS is also reported in unaffected individuals with a family history of schizophrenia, suggesting that NSS may also have a familial component. Although much research has implicated reduced grey matter volume (GMV) in association with these signs, a subcomponent of volume, known as gyrification, has been poorly researched. Given that gyrification develops predominantly in prenatal life it may be particularly susceptible to a neurodevelopmental abnormality. The aims of this study were to investigate the neurodevelopmental and familial underpinnings of NSS in schizophrenia. Specifically, we examined the brain structural correlates, at both the level of GMV and gyrification, of NSS in individuals with schizophrenia, their unaffected relatives and healthy controls. We aimed to determine whether gyrification better predicted NSS severity than GMV, and whether the relationship between brain structure and NSS were present in a step-wise manner across the diagnostic groups. Methods The sample consisted of individuals with schizophrenia (N=66), their unaffected relatives (N=27) and healthy controls (N=53). NSS was assessed with the Neurological Evaluation Scale (NES), and GMV and gyrification were extracted from MRI using the FreeSurfer imaging suite. A series of analysis of covariance were used to compare NES scores and brain measures between the groups. Separate linear regression analyses were used to assess whether whole-brain GMV and gyrification predicted NES above a covariate-only model. Moderation analyses were used to assess whether the relationship between NES and brain structure were different between the diagnostic groups. Error control was achieved with a false discovery rate of 5%. Results NES was significantly higher in schizophrenia patients than relatives (p<.0001), who were in turn significantly higher than controls (p=.034). With the groups combined, lower GMV (p<.0001), as well as lower gyrification (p=.004), predicted higher NES above a covariate-only model. GMV predicted greater variance in NSS in comparison to gyrification, explaining an additional 20.3% of the variance in NES, in comparison to the additional 5.5% of variance in NES explained by gyrification. Diagnostic group moderated the association between GMV and NES (p=.019), but not between gyrification and NES (p=.245). Follow-up tests revealed that lower GMV was associated with higher NES in schizophrenia (t=-4.5, p<.0001) and relatives (t=-2.5, p=.015) but not controls (t=-1.9, p=.055). Discussion Our findings indicate that NSS is heritable, being present in patients with established schizophrenia, and to a lesser extent, in unaffected relatives. Consistent with previous research, we revealed that GMV predicted NSS severity, suggesting that abnormalities in volume may underlie these signs. We additionally found that gyrification predicted, although to a lesser extent than volume, NSS severity, providing some support for schizophrenia being of possible neurodevelopmental origin. Evidence for an association between volume and NSS in relatives, whom are not confounded by illness-related factors such as medication and symptom severity, indicates a familial contribution to the neural underpinnings of NSS. Together, our study suggests that there may be various aetiological pathways underlying soft signs across the schizophrenia diathesis, some that may be of familial or neurodevelopmental origin.
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    PET imaging of putative microglial activation in individuals at ultra-high risk for psychosis, recently diagnosed and chronically ill with schizophrenia
    Di Biase, MA ; Zalesky, A ; O'keefe, G ; Laskaris, L ; Baune, BT ; Weickert, CS ; Olver, J ; McGorry, PD ; Amminger, GP ; Nelson, B ; Scott, AM ; Hickie, I ; Banati, R ; Turkheimer, F ; Yaqub, M ; Everall, IP ; Pantelis, C ; Cropley, V (NATURE PUBLISHING GROUP, 2017-08-29)
    We examined putative microglial activation as a function of illness course in schizophrenia. Microglial activity was quantified using [11C](R)-(1-[2-chrorophynyl]-N-methyl-N-[1-methylpropyl]-3 isoquinoline carboxamide (11C-(R)-PK11195) positron emission tomography (PET) in: (i) 10 individuals at ultra-high risk (UHR) of psychosis; (ii) 18 patients recently diagnosed with schizophrenia; (iii) 15 patients chronically ill with schizophrenia; and, (iv) 27 age-matched healthy controls. Regional-binding potential (BPND) was calculated using the simplified reference-tissue model with four alternative reference inputs. The UHR, recent-onset and chronic patient groups were compared to age-matched healthy control groups to examine between-group BPND differences in 6 regions: dorsal frontal, orbital frontal, anterior cingulate, medial temporal, thalamus and insula. Correlation analysis tested for BPND associations with gray matter volume, peripheral cytokines and clinical variables. The null hypothesis of equality in BPND between patients (UHR, recent-onset and chronic) and respective healthy control groups (younger and older) was not rejected for any group comparison or region. Across all subjects, BPND was positively correlated to age in the thalamus (r=0.43, P=0.008, false discovery rate). No correlations with regional gray matter, peripheral cytokine levels or clinical symptoms were detected. We therefore found no evidence of microglial activation in groups of individuals at high risk, recently diagnosed or chronically ill with schizophrenia. While the possibility of 11C-(R)-PK11195-binding differences in certain patient subgroups remains, the patient cohorts in our study, who also displayed normal peripheral cytokine profiles, do not substantiate the assumption of microglial activation in schizophrenia as a regular and defining feature, as measured by 11C-(R)-PK11195 BPND.