Correlations between brain structure and symptom dimensions of psychosis in schizophrenia, schizoaffective, and psychotic bipolar I disorders

JL Padmanabhan, N Tandon, CS Haller… - Schizophrenia …, 2015 - academic.oup.com
Schizophrenia bulletin, 2015academic.oup.com
Introduction: Structural alterations may correlate with symptom severity in psychotic
disorders, but the existing literature on this issue is heterogeneous. In addition, it is not
known how cortical thickness and cortical surface area correlate with symptom dimensions
of psychosis. Methods: Subjects included 455 individuals with schizophrenia,
schizoaffective, or bipolar I disorders. Data were obtained as part of the Bipolar
Schizophrenia Network for Intermediate Phenotypes study. Diagnosis was made through the …
Introduction
Structural alterations may correlate with symptom severity in psychotic disorders, but the existing literature on this issue is heterogeneous. In addition, it is not known how cortical thickness and cortical surface area correlate with symptom dimensions of psychosis.
Methods
Subjects included 455 individuals with schizophrenia, schizoaffective, or bipolar I disorders. Data were obtained as part of the Bipolar Schizophrenia Network for Intermediate Phenotypes study. Diagnosis was made through the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV. Positive and negative symptom subscales were assessed using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale. Structural brain measurements were extracted from T1-weight structural MRIs using FreeSurfer v5.1 and were correlated with symptom subscales using partial correlations. Exploratory factor analysis was also used to identify factors among those regions correlating with symptom subscales.
Results
The positive symptom subscale correlated inversely with gray matter volume (GMV) and cortical thickness in frontal and temporal regions, whereas the negative symptom subscale correlated inversely with right frontal cortical surface area. Among regions correlating with the positive subscale, factor analysis identified four factors, including a temporal cortical thickness factor and frontal GMV factor. Among regions correlating with the negative subscale, factor analysis identified a frontal GMV-cortical surface area factor. There was no significant diagnosis by structure interactions with symptom severity.
Conclusions
Structural measures correlate with positive and negative symptom severity in psychotic disorders. Cortical thickness demonstrated more associations with psychopathology than cortical surface area.
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