Central Obesity-related Brain Alterations Predict Cognitive Impairments in First Episode of Psychosis.

IF 5.3 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Marian Kolenič, Sean R McWhinney, Maya Selitser, Nicole Šafářová, Katja Franke, Kristyna Vochoskova, Katherine Burdick, Filip Španiel, Tomas Hajek
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Abstract

Background and hypothesis: Cognitive impairment is a key contributor to disability and poor outcomes in schizophrenia, yet it is not adequately addressed by currently available treatments. Thus, it is important to search for preventable or treatable risk factors for cognitive impairment. Here, we hypothesized that obesity-related neurostructural alterations will be associated with worse cognitive outcomes in people with first episode of psychosis (FEP).

Study design: This observational study presents cross-sectional data from the Early-Stage Schizophrenia Outcome project. We acquired T1-weighted 3D MRI scans in 440 participants with FEP at the time of the first hospitalization and in 257 controls. Metabolic assessments included body mass index (BMI), waist-to-hip ratio (WHR), serum concentrations of triglycerides, cholesterol, glucose, insulin, and hs-CRP. We chose machine learning-derived brain age gap estimate (BrainAGE) as our measure of neurostructural changes and assessed attention, working memory and verbal learning using Digit Span and the Auditory Verbal Learning Test.

Study results: Among obesity/metabolic markers, only WHR significantly predicted both, higher BrainAGE (t(281)=2.53, p=0.012) and worse verbal learning (t(290) = -2.51, P = .026). The association between FEP and verbal learning was partially mediated by BrainAGE (average causal mediated effects, ACME = -0.04 [-0.10, -0.01], P = .022) and the higher BrainAGE in FEP was partially mediated by higher WHR (ACME = 0.08 [0.02, 0.15], P = .006).

Conclusions: Central obesity-related brain alterations were linked with worse cognitive performance already early in the course of psychosis. These structure-function links suggest that preventing or treating central obesity could target brain and cognitive impairments in FEP.

中枢性肥胖相关的大脑改变预测首发精神病患者的认知障碍。
背景与假设:认知障碍是精神分裂症致残和预后不良的关键因素,但目前可用的治疗方法尚未充分解决这一问题。因此,寻找可预防或可治疗的认知障碍危险因素是很重要的。在这里,我们假设肥胖相关的神经结构改变将与首发精神病(FEP)患者较差的认知结果相关。研究设计:本观察性研究提供了早期精神分裂症预后项目的横断面数据。我们在首次住院时对440名FEP患者和257名对照组进行了t1加权3D MRI扫描。代谢评估包括身体质量指数(BMI)、腰臀比(WHR)、血清甘油三酯浓度、胆固醇、葡萄糖、胰岛素和hs-CRP。我们选择了机器学习衍生的大脑年龄差距估计(BrainAGE)作为神经结构变化的测量方法,并使用数字跨度和听觉语言学习测试来评估注意力、工作记忆和语言学习。研究结果:在肥胖/代谢指标中,只有WHR能显著预测较高的BrainAGE (t(281)=2.53, p=0.012)和较差的语言学习(t(290) = -2.51, p= 0.026)。脑龄对FEP与言语学习的影响有部分中介作用(平均因果中介效应,ACME = -0.04 [-0.10, -0.01], P = 0.022),较高的脑龄对FEP的影响有部分中介作用(ACME = 0.08 [0.02, 0.15], P = 0.006)。结论:中枢性肥胖相关的大脑改变在精神病病程早期就与认知能力下降有关。这些结构-功能联系表明,预防或治疗中枢性肥胖可能针对FEP的大脑和认知损伤。
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来源期刊
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Schizophrenia Bulletin 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
11.40
自引率
6.10%
发文量
163
审稿时长
4-8 weeks
期刊介绍: Schizophrenia Bulletin seeks to review recent developments and empirically based hypotheses regarding the etiology and treatment of schizophrenia. We view the field as broad and deep, and will publish new knowledge ranging from the molecular basis to social and cultural factors. We will give new emphasis to translational reports which simultaneously highlight basic neurobiological mechanisms and clinical manifestations. Some of the Bulletin content is invited as special features or manuscripts organized as a theme by special guest editors. Most pages of the Bulletin are devoted to unsolicited manuscripts of high quality that report original data or where we can provide a special venue for a major study or workshop report. Supplement issues are sometimes provided for manuscripts reporting from a recent conference.
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