Genetic contribution to disease-course severity and progression in the SUPER-Finland study, a cohort of 10,403 individuals with psychotic disorders
Kämpe, Anders; Suvisaari, Jaana; Lähteenvuo, Markku; Singh, Tarjinder; Ahola-Olli, Ari; Urpa, Lea; Haaki, Willehard; Hietala, Jarmo; Isometsä, Erkki; Jukuri, Tuomas; Kampman, Olli; Kieseppä, Tuula; Lahdensuo, Kaisla; Lönnqvist, Jouko; Männynsalo, Teemu; Paunio, Tiina; Niemi-Pynttäri, Jussi; Suokas, Kimmo; Tuulio-Henriksson, Annamari; Veijola, Juha; Wegelius, Asko; Wegelius, Asko; Daly, Mark; Taylor, Jacob; Kendler, Kenneth S.; Palotie, Aarno; Pietiläinen, Olli (2024)
Kämpe, Anders
Suvisaari, Jaana
Lähteenvuo, Markku
Singh, Tarjinder
Ahola-Olli, Ari
Urpa, Lea
Haaki, Willehard
Hietala, Jarmo
Isometsä, Erkki
Jukuri, Tuomas
Kampman, Olli
Kieseppä, Tuula
Lahdensuo, Kaisla
Lönnqvist, Jouko
Männynsalo, Teemu
Paunio, Tiina
Niemi-Pynttäri, Jussi
Suokas, Kimmo
Tuulio-Henriksson, Annamari
Veijola, Juha
Wegelius, Asko
Wegelius, Asko
Daly, Mark
Taylor, Jacob
Kendler, Kenneth S.
Palotie, Aarno
Pietiläinen, Olli
2024
MOLECULAR PSYCHIATRY
Julkaisun pysyvä osoite on
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202409128693
https://urn.fi/URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202409128693
Kuvaus
Peer reviewed
Tiivistelmä
<p>Genetic factors contribute to the susceptibility of psychotic disorders, but less is known how they affect psychotic disease-course development. Utilizing polygenic scores (PGSs) in combination with longitudinal healthcare data with decades of follow-up we investigated the contributing genetics to psychotic disease-course severity and diagnostic shifts in the SUPER-Finland study, encompassing 10 403 genotyped individuals with a psychotic disorder. To longitudinally track the study participants’ past disease-course severity, we created a psychiatric hospitalization burden metric using the full-coverage and nation-wide Finnish in-hospital registry (data from 1969 and onwards). Using a hierarchical model, ranking the psychotic diagnoses according to clinical severity, we show that high schizophrenia PGS (SZ-PGS) was associated with progression from lower ranked psychotic disorders to schizophrenia (OR = 1.32 [1.23–1.43], p = 1.26e-12). This development manifested already at psychotic illness onset as a higher psychiatric hospitalization burden, the proxy for disease-course severity. In schizophrenia (n = 5 479), both a high SZ-PGS and a low educational attainment PGS (EA-PGS) were associated with increased psychiatric hospitalization burden (p = 1.00e-04 and p = 4.53e-10). The SZ-PGS and the EA-PGS associated with distinct patterns of hospital usage. In individuals with high SZ-PGS, the increased hospitalization burden was composed of longer individual hospital stays, while low EA-PGS associated with shorter but more frequent hospital visits. The negative effect of a low EA-PGS was found to be partly mediated via substance use disorder, a major risk factor for hospitalizations. In conclusion, we show that high SZ-PGS and low EA-PGS both impacted psychotic disease-course development negatively but resulted in different disease-course trajectories.</p>
Kokoelmat
- TUNICRIS-julkaisut [20127]