利用深度表型鉴定年轻人群的多模态心理健康特征

Niels Mørch, Andrés Barrena Calderón, Timo Lehmann Kvamme, Julie Grinderslev Donskov, Blanka Zana, Simon Durand, Jovana Bjekic, Maro G Machizawa, Makiko Yamada, Filip Ottosson, Jonas Bybjerg-Grauholm, Madeleine Ernst, Anders Dupont Børglum, Kristian Sandberg, Per Qvist
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:心理健康包括情绪、心理和社会层面,不仅仅是没有疾病。由于遗传因素和生活经历的复杂相互作用,心理健康可能恶化为需要干预的临床症状。然而,病理状态和非病理状态之间的模糊性,以及临床特征的重叠,对传统的诊断程序提出了挑战,凸显了在分层精神病学中采用维度方法的必要性:我们分析了约 300 名丹麦年轻参与者的综合表型数据,包括心理测量评估、脑成像、遗传学和循环 OMICs 标记。我们采用一种基于心理测量的新型原型分析方法,通过软聚类分析,根据不同的认知、情绪和行为模式对参与者进行分层,同时探索其遗传和神经生物学基础:结果:我们确定了五种心理测量原型,它们代表了心理健康特征的连续性。其中一种原型以高度神经质、情绪失调、压力和抑郁得分较高为特征,与自我报告的心理健康诊断、精神病合并症和家族精神病史密切相关。反映在多基因评分(PGSs)中的精神健康状况遗传易感性占原型变异的 9%,其中与神经影像相关的 PGSs 起了重要作用。更广泛的遗传特征与原型之间的重叠进一步证实了它们的生物学基础。神经影像数据将风险相关原型与区域和全球脑容量变化联系起来,而代谢组学分析则发现了与情绪调节和神经炎症相关的差异代谢物:这项研究证明了以数据为驱动将普通人群划分为由多模态心理健康特征定义的不同风险群体的可行性。这种分层方法为了解心理健康的变异提供了一个强有力的框架,并为在年轻人群中推进早期筛查和有针对性的干预策略提供了巨大的潜力。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Identification of multimodal mental health signatures in the young population using deep phenotyping
Background: Mental health encompasses emotional, psychological, and social dimensions, extending beyond the mere absence of illness. Shaped by a complex interplay of hereditary factors and life experiences, mental health can deteriorate into clinical conditions necessitating intervention. However, the ambiguity between pathological and non-pathological states, along with overlapping clinical profiles, challenges traditional diagnostic procedures, highlighting the need for a dimensional approach in stratified psychiatry. Methods: We analyzed comprehensive phenotypic data from ~300 young Danish participants, including psychometric assessments, brain imaging, genetics, and circulatory OMICs markers. Using a novel psychometry-based archetyping approach, we employed soft-clustering analyses to stratify participants based on distinct cognitive, emotional, and behavioral patterns, while exploring their genetic and neurobiological underpinnings. Results: Five psychometric archetypes were identified, representing a continuum of mental health traits. One archetype, characterized by high neuroticism, emotional dysregulation, and elevated stress and depression scores, was firmly associated with self-reported mental health diagnoses, psychiatric comorbidities, and family history of mental illness. Genetic predisposition to mental health conditions, reflected in polygenic scores (PGSs), accounted for up to 9% of the variance in archetypes, with significant contributions from neuroimaging-related PGSs. The overlaps between broader genetic profiles and archetypes further confirmed their biological foundations. Neuroimaging data linked the risk-associated archetype to both regional and global brain volumetric changes, while metabolomic analysis identified differentiating metabolites related to mood regulation and neuroinflammation. Conclusions: This study demonstrates the feasibility of data-driven stratification of the general population into distinct risk groups defined by multimodal mental health signatures. This stratification offers a robust framework for understanding mental health variation and holds significant potential for advancing early screening and targeted intervention strategies in the young population.
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