Psychiatry - Research Publications

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    Cortical Brain Abnormalities in 4474 Individuals With Schizophrenia and 5098 Control Subjects via the Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics Through Meta Analysis (ENIGMA) Consortium
    van Erp, TGM ; Walton, E ; Hibar, DP ; Schmaal, L ; Jiang, W ; Glahn, DC ; Pearlson, GD ; Yao, N ; Fukunaga, M ; Hashimoto, R ; Okada, N ; Yamamori, H ; Bustillo, JR ; Clark, VP ; Agartz, I ; Mueller, BA ; Cahn, W ; de Zwarte, SMC ; Pol, HEH ; Kahn, RS ; Ophoff, RA ; van Haren, NEM ; Andreassen, OA ; Dale, AM ; Nhat, TD ; Gurholt, TP ; Hartberg, CB ; Haukvik, UK ; Jorgensen, KN ; Lagerberg, T ; Melle, I ; Westlye, LT ; Gruber, O ; Kraemer, B ; Richter, A ; Zilles, D ; Calhoun, VD ; Crespo-Facorro, B ; Roiz-Santianez, R ; Tordesillas-Gutierrez, D ; Loughland, C ; Carr, VJ ; Catts, S ; Cropley, VL ; Fullerton, JM ; Green, MJ ; Henskens, FA ; Jablensky, A ; Lenroot, RK ; Mowry, BJ ; Michie, PT ; Pantelis, C ; Quide, Y ; Schall, U ; Scott, RJ ; Cairns, MJ ; Seal, M ; Tooney, PA ; Rasser, PE ; Cooper, G ; Weickert, CS ; Weickert, TW ; Morris, DW ; Hong, E ; Kochunov, P ; Beard, LM ; Gur, RE ; Gur, RC ; Satterthwaite, TD ; Wolf, DH ; Belger, A ; Brown, GG ; Ford, JM ; Macciardi, F ; Mathalon, DH ; O'Leary, DS ; Potkin, SG ; Preda, A ; Voyvodic, J ; Lim, KO ; McEwen, S ; Yang, F ; Tan, Y ; Tan, S ; Wang, Z ; Fan, F ; Chen, J ; Xiang, H ; Tang, S ; Guo, H ; Wan, P ; Wei, D ; Bockholt, HJ ; Ehrlich, S ; Wolthusen, RPF ; King, MD ; Shoemaker, JM ; Sponheim, SR ; De Haan, L ; Koenders, L ; Machielsen, MW ; van Amelsvoort, T ; Veltman, DJ ; Assogna, F ; Banaj, N ; de Rossi, P ; Iorio, M ; Piras, F ; Spalletta, G ; McKenna, PJ ; Pomarol-Clotet, E ; Salvador, R ; Corvin, A ; Donohoe, G ; Kelly, S ; Whelan, CD ; Dickie, EW ; Rotenberg, D ; Voineskos, AN ; Ciufolini, S ; Radua, J ; Dazzan, P ; Murray, R ; Marques, TR ; Simmons, A ; Borgwardt, S ; Egloff, L ; Harrisberger, F ; Riecher-Roessler, A ; Smieskova, R ; Alpert, K ; Wang, L ; Jonsson, EG ; Koops, S ; Sommer, IEC ; Bertolino, A ; Bonvino, A ; Di Giorgio, A ; Neilson, E ; Mayer, AR ; Stephen, JM ; Kwon, JS ; Yun, J-Y ; Cannon, DM ; McDonald, C ; Lebedeva, I ; Tomyshev, AS ; Akhadov, T ; Kaleda, V ; Fatouros-Bergman, H ; Flyckt, L ; Busatto, GF ; Rosa, PGP ; Serpa, MH ; Zanetti, M ; Hoschl, C ; Skoch, A ; Spaniel, F ; Tomecek, D ; Hagenaars, SP ; McIntosh, AM ; Whalley, HC ; Lawrie, SM ; Knoechel, C ; Oertel-Knoechel, V ; Staeblein, M ; Howells, FM ; Stein, DJ ; Temmingh, HS ; Uhlmann, A ; Lopez-Jaramillo, C ; Dima, D ; McMahon, A ; Faskowitz, J ; Gutman, BA ; Jahanshad, N ; Thompson, PM ; Turner, JA (ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC, 2018-11-01)
    BACKGROUND: The profile of cortical neuroanatomical abnormalities in schizophrenia is not fully understood, despite hundreds of published structural brain imaging studies. This study presents the first meta-analysis of cortical thickness and surface area abnormalities in schizophrenia conducted by the ENIGMA (Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta Analysis) Schizophrenia Working Group. METHODS: The study included data from 4474 individuals with schizophrenia (mean age, 32.3 years; range, 11-78 years; 66% male) and 5098 healthy volunteers (mean age, 32.8 years; range, 10-87 years; 53% male) assessed with standardized methods at 39 centers worldwide. RESULTS: Compared with healthy volunteers, individuals with schizophrenia have widespread thinner cortex (left/right hemisphere: Cohen's d = -0.530/-0.516) and smaller surface area (left/right hemisphere: Cohen's d = -0.251/-0.254), with the largest effect sizes for both in frontal and temporal lobe regions. Regional group differences in cortical thickness remained significant when statistically controlling for global cortical thickness, suggesting regional specificity. In contrast, effects for cortical surface area appear global. Case-control, negative, cortical thickness effect sizes were two to three times larger in individuals receiving antipsychotic medication relative to unmedicated individuals. Negative correlations between age and bilateral temporal pole thickness were stronger in individuals with schizophrenia than in healthy volunteers. Regional cortical thickness showed significant negative correlations with normalized medication dose, symptom severity, and duration of illness and positive correlations with age at onset. CONCLUSIONS: The findings indicate that the ENIGMA meta-analysis approach can achieve robust findings in clinical neuroscience studies; also, medication effects should be taken into account in future genetic association studies of cortical thickness in schizophrenia.
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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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    The impact of premorbid and current intellect in schizophrenia: cognitive, symptom, and functional outcomes
    Wells, R ; Swaminathan, V ; Sundram, S ; Weinberg, D ; Bruggemann, J ; Jacomb, I ; Cropley, V ; Lenroot, R ; Pereira, AM ; Zalesky, A ; Bousman, C ; Pantelis, C ; Weickert, CS ; Weickert, TW (SPRINGERNATURE, 2015)
    BACKGROUND: Cognitive heterogeneity among people with schizophrenia has been defined on the basis of premorbid and current intelligence quotient (IQ) estimates. In a relatively large, community cohort, we aimed to independently replicate and extend cognitive subtyping work by determining the extent of symptom severity and functional deficits in each group. METHODS: A total of 635 healthy controls and 534 patients with a diagnosis of schizophrenia or schizoaffective disorder were recruited through the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank. Patients were classified into cognitive subgroups on the basis of the Wechsler Test of Adult Reading (a premorbid IQ estimate) and current overall cognitive abilities into preserved, deteriorated, and compromised groups using both clinical and empirical (k-means clustering) methods. Additional cognitive, functional, and symptom outcomes were compared among the resulting groups. RESULTS: A total of 157 patients (29%) classified as 'preserved' performed within one s.d. of control means in all cognitive domains. Patients classified as 'deteriorated' (n=239, 44%) performed more than one s.d. below control means in all cognitive domains except estimated premorbid IQ and current visuospatial abilities. A separate 138 patients (26%), classified as 'compromised,' performed more than one s.d. below control means in all cognitive domains and displayed greater impairment than other groups on symptom and functional measures. CONCLUSIONS: In the present study, we independently replicated our previous cognitive classifications of people with schizophrenia. In addition, we extended previous work by demonstrating worse functional outcomes and symptom severity in the compromised group.
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    Widespread white matter microstructural differences in schizophrenia across 4322 individuals: results from the ENIGMA Schizophrenia DTI Working Group
    Kelly, S ; Jahanshad, N ; Zalesky, A ; Kochunov, P ; Agartz, I ; Alloza, C ; Andreassen, OA ; Arango, C ; Banaj, N ; Bouix, S ; Bousman, CA ; Brouwer, RM ; Bruggemann, J ; Bustillo, J ; Cahn, W ; Calhoun, V ; Cannon, D ; Carr, V ; Catts, S ; Chen, J ; Chen, J-X ; Chen, X ; Chiapponi, C ; Cho, KK ; Ciullo, V ; Corvin, AS ; Crespo-Facorro, B ; Cropley, V ; De Rossi, P ; Diaz-Caneja, CM ; Dickie, EW ; Ehrlich, S ; Fan, F-M ; Faskowitz, J ; Fatouros-Bergman, H ; Flyckt, L ; Ford, JM ; Fouche, J-P ; Fukunaga, M ; Gill, M ; Glahn, DC ; Gollub, R ; Goudzwaard, ED ; Guo, H ; Gur, RE ; Gur, RC ; Gurholt, TP ; Hashimoto, R ; Hatton, SN ; Henskens, FA ; Hibar, DP ; Hickie, IB ; Hong, LE ; Horacek, J ; Howells, FM ; Pol, HEH ; Hyde, CL ; Isaev, D ; Jablensky, A ; Jansen, PR ; Janssen, J ; Jonsson, EG ; Jung, LA ; Kahn, RS ; Kikinis, Z ; Liu, K ; Klauser, P ; Knoechel, C ; Kubicki, M ; Lagopoulos, J ; Langen, C ; Lawrie, S ; Lenroot, RK ; Lim, KO ; Lopez-Jaramillo, C ; Lyall, A ; Magnotta, V ; Mandl, RCW ; Mathalon, DH ; McCarley, RW ; McCarthy-Jones, S ; McDonald, C ; McEwen, S ; McIntosh, A ; Melicher, T ; Mesholam-Gately, R ; Michie, PT ; Mowry, B ; Mueller, BA ; Newell, DT ; O'Donnell, P ; Oertel-Knoechel, V ; Oestreich, L ; Paciga, SA ; Pantelis, C ; Pasternak, O ; Pearlson, G ; Pellicano, GR ; Pereira, A ; Zapata, JP ; Piras, F ; Potkin, SG ; Preda, A ; Rasser, PE ; Roalf, DR ; Roiz, R ; Roos, A ; Rotenberg, D ; Satterthwaite, TD ; Savadjiev, P ; Schall, U ; Scott, RJ ; Seal, ML ; Seidman, LJ ; Weickert, CS ; Whelan, CD ; Shenton, ME ; Kwon, JS ; Spalletta, G ; Spaniel, F ; Sprooten, E ; Stablein, M ; Stein, DJ ; Sundram, S ; Tan, Y ; Tan, S ; Tang, S ; Temmingh, HS ; Westlye, LT ; Tonnesen, S ; Tordesillas-Gutierrez, D ; Doan, NT ; Vaidya, J ; van Haren, NEM ; Vargas, CD ; Vecchio, D ; Velakoulis, D ; Voineskos, A ; Voyvodic, JQ ; Wang, Z ; Wan, P ; Wei, D ; Weickert, TW ; Whalley, H ; White, T ; Whitford, TJ ; Wojcik, JD ; Xiang, H ; Xie, Z ; Yamamori, H ; Yang, F ; Yao, N ; Zhang, G ; Zhao, J ; van Erp, TGM ; Turner, J ; Thompson, PM ; Donohoe, G (SPRINGERNATURE, 2018-05)
    The regional distribution of white matter (WM) abnormalities in schizophrenia remains poorly understood, and reported disease effects on the brain vary widely between studies. In an effort to identify commonalities across studies, we perform what we believe is the first ever large-scale coordinated study of WM microstructural differences in schizophrenia. Our analysis consisted of 2359 healthy controls and 1963 schizophrenia patients from 29 independent international studies; we harmonized the processing and statistical analyses of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) data across sites and meta-analyzed effects across studies. Significant reductions in fractional anisotropy (FA) in schizophrenia patients were widespread, and detected in 20 of 25 regions of interest within a WM skeleton representing all major WM fasciculi. Effect sizes varied by region, peaking at (d=0.42) for the entire WM skeleton, driven more by peripheral areas as opposed to the core WM where regions of interest were defined. The anterior corona radiata (d=0.40) and corpus callosum (d=0.39), specifically its body (d=0.39) and genu (d=0.37), showed greatest effects. Significant decreases, to lesser degrees, were observed in almost all regions analyzed. Larger effect sizes were observed for FA than diffusivity measures; significantly higher mean and radial diffusivity was observed for schizophrenia patients compared with controls. No significant effects of age at onset of schizophrenia or medication dosage were detected. As the largest coordinated analysis of WM differences in a psychiatric disorder to date, the present study provides a robust profile of widespread WM abnormalities in schizophrenia patients worldwide. Interactive three-dimensional visualization of the results is available at www.enigma-viewer.org.
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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.
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    Elevated ubiquitinated proteins in brain and blood of individuals with schizophrenia
    Bousman, CA ; Luza, S ; Mancuso, SG ; Kang, D ; Opazo, CM ; Mostaid, MS ; Cropley, V ; McGorry, P ; Weickert, CS ; Pantelis, C ; Bush, AI ; Everall, IP (NATURE PORTFOLIO, 2019-02-19)
    Dysregulation of the ubiquitin proteasome system (UPS) has been linked to schizophrenia but it is not clear if this dysregulation is detectable in both brain and blood. We examined free mono-ubiquitin, ubiquitinated proteins, catalytic ubiquitination, and proteasome activities in frozen postmortem OFC tissue from 76 (38 schizophrenia, 38 control) matched individuals, as well as erythrocytes from 181 living participants, who comprised 30 individuals with recent onset schizophrenia (mean illness duration = 1 year), 63 individuals with 'treatment-resistant' schizophrenia (mean illness duration = 17 years), and 88 age-matched participants without major psychiatric illness. Ubiquitinated protein levels were elevated in postmortem OFC in schizophrenia compared to controls (p = <0.001, AUC = 74.2%). Similarly, individuals with 'treatment-resistant' schizophrenia had higher levels of ubiquitinated proteins in erythrocytes compared to those with recent onset schizophrenia (p < 0.001, AUC = 65.5%) and controls (p < 0.001, AUC = 69.4%). The results could not be better explained by changes in proteasome activity, demographic, medication, or tissue factors. Our results suggest that ubiquitinated protein formation may be abnormal in both the brain and erythrocytes of those with schizophrenia, particularly in the later stages or specific sub-groups of the illness. A derangement in protein ubiquitination may be linked to pathogenesis or neurotoxicity in schizophrenia, and its manifestation in the blood may have prognostic utility.
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    Hippocampal subfields and visuospatial associative memory across stages of schizophrenia-spectrum disorder
    Wannan, CMJ ; Cropley, VL ; Chakravarty, MM ; Van Rheenen, TE ; Mancuso, S ; Bousman, C ; Everall, I ; McGorry, PD ; Pantelis, C ; Bartholomeusz, CF (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2019-10)
    BACKGROUND: While previous studies have identified relationships between hippocampal volumes and memory performance in schizophrenia, these relationships are not apparent in healthy individuals. Further, few studies have examined the role of hippocampal subfields in illness-related memory deficits, and no study has examined potential differences across varying illness stages. The current study aimed to investigate whether individuals with early and established psychosis exhibited differential relationships between visuospatial associative memory and hippocampal subfield volumes. METHODS: Measurements of visuospatial associative memory performance and grey matter volume were obtained from 52 individuals with a chronic schizophrenia-spectrum disorder, 28 youth with recent-onset psychosis, 52 older healthy controls, and 28 younger healthy controls. RESULTS: Both chronic and recent-onset patients had impaired visuospatial associative memory performance, however, only chronic patients showed hippocampal subfield volume loss. Both chronic and recent-onset patients demonstrated relationships between visuospatial associative memory performance and hippocampal subfield volumes in the CA4/dentate gyrus and the stratum that were not observed in older healthy controls. There were no group by volume interactions when chronic and recent-onset patients were compared. CONCLUSIONS: The current study extends the findings of previous studies by identifying particular hippocampal subfields, including the hippocampal stratum layers and the dentate gyrus, that appear to be related to visuospatial associative memory ability in individuals with both chronic and first-episode psychosis.
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    Exploring the moderating effects of dopaminergic polymorphisms and childhood adversity on brain morphology in schizophrenia-spectrum disorders
    Hoffmann, C ; Van Rheenen, TE ; Mancuso, SG ; Zalesky, A ; Bruggemann, J ; Lenroot, RK ; Sundram, S ; Weickert, CS ; Weickert, TW ; Pantelis, C ; Cropley, V ; Bousman, CA (ELSEVIER IRELAND LTD, 2018-11-30)
    Genetic and environmental etiologies may contribute to schizophrenia and its associated neurobiological profile. We examined the interaction between dopaminergic polymorphisms, childhood adversity and diagnosis (schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder) on dopamine-related brain structures. Childhood adversity histories and structural MRI data were obtained from 249 (153 schizophrenia/schizoaffective, 96 controls) participants registered in the Australian Schizophrenia Research Bank. Polymorphisms in DRD2 and COMT were genotyped and a dopaminergic risk allelic load (RAL) was calculated. Regression analysis was used to test the main and interaction effects of RAL, childhood adversity and diagnosis on volumes of dopamine-related brain structures (caudate, putamen, nucleus accumbens, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and hippocampus). A schizophrenia/schizoaffective diagnosis showed significant main effects on bilateral hippocampus, left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex and bilateral putamen volumes. RAL showed a significant main effect on left putamen volumes. Furthermore, across the whole sample, a significant two-way interaction between dopaminergic RAL and childhood adversity was found for left putamen volumes. No brain structure volumes were predicted by a three-way interaction that included diagnosis. Our finding suggests the left putamen may be particularly sensitive to dopaminergic gene-environment interactions regardless of diagnosis. However, larger studies are needed to assess whether these interactions are more or less pronounced in those with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorders.
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    Deterioration of visuospatial associative memory following a first psychotic episode: a long-term follow-up study
    Wannan, CMJ ; Bartholomeusz, CF ; Cropley, VL ; Van Rheenen, TE ; Panayiotou, A ; Brewer, WJ ; Proffitt, TM ; Henry, L ; Harris, MG ; Velakoulis, D ; McGorry, P ; Pantelis, C ; Wood, SJ (CAMBRIDGE UNIV PRESS, 2018-01)
    BACKGROUND: Cognitive deficits are a core feature of schizophrenia, and impairments in most domains are thought to be stable over the course of the illness. However, cross-sectional evidence indicates that some areas of cognition, such as visuospatial associative memory, may be preserved in the early stages of psychosis, but become impaired in later established illness stages. This longitudinal study investigated change in visuospatial and verbal associative memory following psychosis onset. METHODS: In total 95 first-episode psychosis (FEP) patients and 63 healthy controls (HC) were assessed on neuropsychological tests at baseline, with 38 FEP and 22 HCs returning for follow-up assessment at 5-11 years. Visuospatial associative memory was assessed using the Cambridge Neuropsychological Test Automated Battery Visuospatial Paired-Associate Learning task, and verbal associative memory was assessed using Verbal Paired Associates subtest of the Wechsler Memory Scale - Revised. RESULTS: Visuospatial and verbal associative memory at baseline did not differ significantly between FEP patients and HCs. However, over follow-up, visuospatial associative memory deteriorated significantly for the FEP group, relative to healthy individuals. Conversely, verbal associative memory improved to a similar degree observed in HCs. In the FEP cohort, visuospatial (but not verbal) associative memory ability at baseline was associated with functional outcome at follow-up. CONCLUSIONS: Areas of cognition that develop prior to psychosis onset, such as visuospatial and verbal associative memory, may be preserved early in the illness. Later deterioration in visuospatial memory ability may relate to progressive structural and functional brain abnormalities that occurs following psychosis onset.
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    Widespread Volumetric Reductions in Schizophrenia and Schizoaffective Patients Displaying Compromised Cognitive Abilities
    Van Rheenen, TE ; Cropley, V ; Zalesky, A ; Bousman, C ; Wells, R ; Bruggemann, J ; Sundram, S ; Weinberg, D ; Lenroot, RK ; Pereira, A ; Weickert, CS ; Weickert, TW ; Pantelis, C (OXFORD UNIV PRESS, 2018-05)
    OBJECTIVE: Progress toward understanding brain mechanisms in psychosis is hampered by failures to account for within-group heterogeneity that exists across neuropsychological domains. We recently identified distinct cognitive subgroups that might assist in identifying more biologically meaningful subtypes of psychosis. In the present study, we examined whether underlying structural brain abnormalities differentiate these cognitively derived subgroups. METHOD: 1.5T T1 weighted structural scans were acquired for 168 healthy controls and 220 patients with schizophrenia/schizoaffective disorder. Based on previous work, 47 patients were categorized as being cognitively compromised (impaired premorbid and current IQ), 100 as cognitively deteriorated (normal premorbid IQ, impaired current IQ), and 73 as putatively cognitively preserved (premorbid and current IQ within 1 SD of controls). Global, subcortical and cortical volume, thickness, and surface area measures were compared among groups. RESULTS: Whole cortex, subcortical, and regional volume and thickness reductions were evident in all subgroups compared to controls, with the largest effect sizes in the compromised group. This subgroup also showed abnormalities in regions not seen in the other patient groups, including smaller left superior and middle frontal areas, left anterior and inferior temporal areas and right lateral medial and inferior frontal, occipital lobe and superior temporal areas. CONCLUSIONS: This pattern of more prominent brain structural abnormalities in the group with the most marked cognitive impairments-both currently and putatively prior to illness onset, is consistent with the concept of schizophrenia as a progressive neurodevelopmental disorder. In this group, neurodevelopmental and neurodegenerative factors may be important for cognitive function.