Abstract

Background: Prior studies have separately demonstrated that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and schizophrenia polygenic risk score (PRS) are predictive of antipsychotic medication treatment outcomes in schizophrenia. However, it remains unclear whether MRI combined with PRS can provide superior prognostic performance. Besides, the relative importance of these measures in predictions is not investigated. Methods: We collected 57 patients with schizophrenia, all of which had baseline MRI and genotype data. All these patients received approximately 6 weeks of antipsychotic medication treatment. Psychotic symptom severity was assessed using the Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) at baseline and follow-up. We divided these patients into responders (N = 20) or non-responders (N = 37) based on whether their percentages of PANSS total reduction were above or below 50%. Nine categories of MRI measures and PRSs with 145 different p-value thresholding ranges were calculated. We trained machine learning classifiers with these baseline predictors to identify whether a patient was a responder or non-responder. Results: The extreme gradient boosting (XGBoost) technique was applied to build binary classifiers. Using a leave-one-out cross-validation scheme, we achieved an accuracy of 86% with all MRI and PRS features. Other metrics were also estimated, including sensitivity (85%), specificity (86%), F1-score (81%), and area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (0.86). We found excluding a single feature category of gray matter volume (GMV), amplitude of low-frequency fluctuation (ALFF), and surface curvature could lead to a maximum accuracy drop of 10.5%. These three categories contributed more than half of the top 10 important features. Besides, removing PRS features caused a modest accuracy drop (8.8%), which was not the least decrease (1.8%) among all feature categories. Conclusions: Our classifier using both MRI and PRS features was stable and not biased to predicting either responder or non-responder. Combining with MRI measures, PRS could provide certain extra predictive power of antipsychotic medication treatment outcomes in schizophrenia. PRS exhibited medium importance in predictions, lower than GMV, ALFF, and surface curvature, but higher than measures of cortical thickness, cortical volume, and surface sulcal depth. Our findings inform the contributions of PRS in predictions of treatment outcomes in schizophrenia.

Highlights

  • Pharmacological therapy has long been the cornerstone of schizophrenia management, which aims to relieve psychotic symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized thinking, et al (Kane and Correll, 2010; Patel et al, 2014; Tarcijonas and Sarpal, 2019)

  • Quality control (QC) for rsfMRI data was completed by examining the framewise displacement (FD) (Power et al, 2012)

  • Individuals with schizophrenia were reasonably defined as responders (N = 20) or non-responders (N = 37) according to their amelioration degrees of overall symptom severity, which was assessed using Positive and Negative Syndrome Scale (PANSS) total score, after accepting 6 weeks of antipsychotic medications treatment

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Summary

Introduction

Pharmacological therapy has long been the cornerstone of schizophrenia management, which aims to relieve psychotic symptoms, such as delusions, hallucinations, and disorganized thinking, et al (Kane and Correll, 2010; Patel et al, 2014; Tarcijonas and Sarpal, 2019). Varying degrees of remission are acquired in a great number of patients with schizophrenia, substantial evidence suggests that antipsychotic medications can lead to various adverse effects (Muench and Hamer, 2010; Patel et al, 2014; Stroup and Gray, 2018). Prior studies have separately demonstrated that magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and schizophrenia polygenic risk score (PRS) are predictive of antipsychotic medication treatment outcomes in schizophrenia. It remains unclear whether MRI combined with PRS can provide superior prognostic performance. The relative importance of these measures in predictions is not investigated

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