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Shared and Specific Patterns of Structural Brain Connectivity Across Affective and Psychotic Disorders

Authors :
Repple, Jonathan
Gruber, Marius
Mauritz, Marco
de Lange, Siemon C
Winter, Nils Ralf
Opel, Nils
Goltermann, Janik
Meinert, Susanne
Grotegerd, Dominik
Leehr, Elisabeth J
Enneking, Verena
Borgers, Tiana
Klug, Melissa
Lemke, Hannah
Waltemate, Lena
Thiel, Katharina
Winter, Alexandra
Breuer, Fabian
Grumbach, Pascal
Hofmann, Hannes
Stein, Frederike
Brosch, Katharina
Ringwald, Kai G
Pfarr, Julia
Thomas-Odenthal, Florian
Meller, Tina
Jansen, Andreas
Nenadic, Igor
Redlich, Ronny
Bauer, Jochen
Kircher, Tilo
Hahn, Tim
van den Heuvel, Martijn
Dannlowski, Udo
Repple, Jonathan
Gruber, Marius
Mauritz, Marco
de Lange, Siemon C
Winter, Nils Ralf
Opel, Nils
Goltermann, Janik
Meinert, Susanne
Grotegerd, Dominik
Leehr, Elisabeth J
Enneking, Verena
Borgers, Tiana
Klug, Melissa
Lemke, Hannah
Waltemate, Lena
Thiel, Katharina
Winter, Alexandra
Breuer, Fabian
Grumbach, Pascal
Hofmann, Hannes
Stein, Frederike
Brosch, Katharina
Ringwald, Kai G
Pfarr, Julia
Thomas-Odenthal, Florian
Meller, Tina
Jansen, Andreas
Nenadic, Igor
Redlich, Ronny
Bauer, Jochen
Kircher, Tilo
Hahn, Tim
van den Heuvel, Martijn
Dannlowski, Udo
Source :
Biological Psychiatry (2022) date: 2022-06-21 [ISSN 0006-3223]
Publication Year :
2022

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Altered brain structural connectivity has been implicated in the pathophysiology of psychiatric disorders including schizophrenia (SZ), bipolar disorder (BD), and major depressive disorder (MDD). However, it is unknown which part of these connectivity abnormalities are disorder specific and which are shared across the spectrum of psychotic and affective disorders. We investigated common and distinct brain connectivity alterations in a large sample (N = 1743) of patients with SZ, BD, or MDD and healthy control (HC) subjects.METHODS: This study examined diffusion-weighted imaging-based structural connectome topology in 720 patients with MDD, 112 patients with BD, 69 patients with SZ, and 842 HC subjects (mean age of all subjects: 35.7 years). Graph theory-based network analysis was used to investigate connectome organization. Machine learning algorithms were trained to classify groups based on their structural connectivity matrices.RESULTS: Groups differed significantly in the network metrics global efficiency, clustering, present edges, and global connectivity strength with a converging pattern of alterations between diagnoses (e.g., efficiency: HC > MDD > BD > SZ, false discovery rate-corrected p = .028). Subnetwork analysis revealed a common core of edges that were affected across all 3 disorders, but also revealed differences between disorders. Machine learning algorithms could not discriminate between disorders but could discriminate each diagnosis from HC. Furthermore, dysconnectivity patterns were found most pronounced in patients with an early disease onset irrespective of diagnosis.CONCLUSIONS: We found shared and specific signatures of structural white matter dysconnectivity in SZ, BD, and MDD, leading to commonly reduced network efficiency. These results showed a compromised brain communication across a spectrum of major psychiatric disorders.

Details

Database :
OAIster
Journal :
Biological Psychiatry (2022) date: 2022-06-21 [ISSN 0006-3223]
Notes :
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2022.05.031, Biological Psychiatry (2022) date: 2022-06-21 [ISSN 0006-3223], English
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1346646780
Document Type :
Electronic Resource