Mapping genetic convergence across brain structure, mental health, and cardiometabolic disease
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Individuals with psychiatric disorders frequently experience comorbid cardiometabolic conditions, complicating treatment and worsening health outcomes. Both psychiatric and cardiometabolic disorders have been individually associated with alterations in brain structure. Yet, it remains unclear whether these associations reflect a shared genetic basis that also contributes to their frequent co-occurrence. Here we analyzed genome-wide association summary statistics for psychiatric disorders, cardiometabolic disease, and brain morphology using complementary genetic approaches to disentangle genetic factors underlying brain alterations and comorbidity. Our results highlighted differences in patterns of genetic overlap across disorders. Schizophrenia showed substantial polygenic overlap with cortical thickness and type 2 diabetes, despite low genetic correlation. In contrast, ADHD was more genetically correlated with cardiometabolic disease but showed limited overlap with cortical morphology. Mediation analysis suggested that cortical surface area may partly mediate the genetic link between ADHD and type 2 diabetes. Pathway enrichment highlighted metabolic stress in ADHD and neurodevelopmental and immune processes in schizophrenia. These findings suggest that psychiatric-cardiometabolic comorbidity arises through both shared and disorder-specific genetic pathways, clarifying the genetic architecture of multimorbidity and informing trait-targeted prevention strategies in psychiatry.