Cerebral cortical alterations in adolescent early-onset psychosis: a surface-based morphometry mega-analysis

Read the full article See related articles

Listed in

This article is not in any list yet, why not save it to one of your lists.
Log in to save this article

Abstract

Cortical brain morphology in early-onset psychosis (EOP; age of onset < 19 years) is poorly understood, partly due to recruitment constraints linked to its low incidence. We pooled T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) data from 387 adolescents with EOP (mean age=16.1±1.5; 49.6% female) and 338 healthy controls (CTR; mean age=15.8±1.9, 54.4% female) from nine research sites worldwide. Using harmonized processing protocols with FreeSurfer, we extracted cortical brain metrics from 34 bilateral regions. Univariate regression analysis revealed widespread lower bilateral cortical thickness (left/right hemisphere: d =-0.36/-0.31), surface area (left/right: d =-0.42/-0.41), cortical volume (left/right: d =-0.58/-0.56), and Local Gyrification Index (LGI; left/right: d =-0.39/-0.52) in EOP relative to CTR. Subgroup analyses showed broader and more pronounced case-control differences in early-onset schizophrenia for area, volume, and LGI. We found no associations with antipsychotic medication use, illness duration, age of onset, or positive symptoms. Negative symptoms were related to smaller left lingual volumes (partial r =-0.21; p FDR =0.014) and antidepressant users had smaller area ( d =-0.43; p FDR =0.034) and volume ( d =-0.50; p FDR =0.003) of the right rostral anterior cingulate compared to non-users. Cortical alterations in EOP showed a similar pattern to those observed in prior studies on adults with schizophrenia (SCZ; r =0.62) and bipolar disorders (BD; r =0.61). However, surface area alterations were overall 1.5 times greater for EOP than adult SCZ and 4.6 times greater than adult BD. In the largest study of its kind, we observed an extensive pattern of cortical alterations in adolescents with psychotic disorders, highlighting the potential impact of aberrant neurodevelopment on cortical morphology in this clinical group.

Article activity feed