An Examination of Polygenic Score Risk Prediction in Individuals With First-Episode Psychosis

作者:Vassos Evangelos; Di Forti Marta; Coleman Jonathan; Iyegbe Conrad; Prata Diana; Euesden Jack; O' Reilly Paul; Curtis Charles; Kolliakou Anna; Patel Hamel; Newhouse Stephen; Traylor Matthew; Ajnakina Olesya; Mondelli Valeria; Marques Tiago Reis; Gardner Sood Poonam; Aitchison Katherine J; Powell John; Atakan Zerrin; Greenwood Kathryn E; Smith Shubulade; Ismail Khalida; Pariante Carmine; Gaughran Fiona; Dazzan Paola; Markus Hugh S; David Anthony S
来源:Biological Psychiatry, 2017, 81(6): 470-477.
DOI:10.1016/j.biopsych.2016.06.028

摘要

BACKGROUND: Polygenic risk scores (PRSs) have successfully summarized genome- wide effects of genetic variants in schizophrenia with significant predictive power. In a clinical sample of first- episode psychosis (FEP) patients, we estimated the ability of PRSs to discriminate case-control status and to predict the development of schizophrenia as opposed to other psychoses. METHODS: The sample (445 case and 265 control subjects) was genotyped on the Illumina HumanCore Exome BeadChip with an additional 828 control subjects of African ancestry genotyped on the Illumina Multi- Ethnic Genotyping Array. To calculate PRSs, we used the results from the latest Psychiatric Genomics Consortium schizophrenia meta- analysis. We examined the association of PRSs with case- control status and with schizophrenia versus other psychoses in European and African ancestry FEP patients and in a second sample of 248 case subjects with chronic psychosis. RESULTS: PRS had good discriminative ability of case- control status in FEP European ancestry individuals (9.4% of the variance explained, p < 10(-26)), but lower in individuals of African ancestry (R-2 = 1.1%, p = .004). Furthermore, PRS distinguished European ancestry case subjects who went on to acquire a schizophrenia diagnosis from those who developed other psychotic disorders (R-2 = 9.2%, p =.002). CONCLUSIONS: PRS was a powerful predictor of case-control status in a European sample of patients with FEP, even though a large proportion did not have an established diagnosis of schizophrenia at the time of assessment. PRS was significantly different between those case subjects who developed schizophrenia from those who did not, although the discriminative accuracy may not yet be sufficient for clinical utility in FEP.