Abstract

Background:Antipsychotic treatment has been shown to yield hippocampal and amygdalar volumetric changes in first-episode schizophrenia (FES). However, whether antipsychotic induced volumetric changes interact with age remains unclear. MethodsThe current study includes data from 120 medication naïve FES patients and 110 matched healthy controls (HC). Patients underwent MRI scans before (T1) and after (T2) antipsychotic treatment. HCs underwent MRI scans at baseline only. The hippocampus and amygdala were segmented via Freesurfer 7. General linear models were conducted to investigate the effect of age by diagnosis interaction on baseline volume. Linear mixed models (LMM) were used to detect the effect of age on volumetric changes from pre to post treatment in FES. ResultsGLM revealed a trending effect (F = 3.758, p = 0.054) of age by diagnosis interaction on the baseline volume of the left (whole) hippocampus, with older FES patients showing smaller hippocampal volumes, relative to HC, when controlled sex, education years, and ICV. LMM showed a significant age by time-point interaction effect (F = 4.194, estimate effect = −1.964, p = 0.043) on left hippocampal volume in all FES and significant time effect(F = 6.608,T1-T2(estimate effect) = 62.486, p = 0.011), whereby younger patients showed greater hippocampal volumetric decreases following treatment. At the subfield level, a significant time effect emerged in left molecular_layer_HP (F = 4.509,T1-T2(estimate effect) = 12.424, p = 0.032, FDR corrected) and left cornu ammonis(CA)4 (F = 4.800,T1-T2(estimate effect) = 7.527, p = 0.046, FDR corrected), implying volumetric reduction after treatment in these subfields. ConclusionsOur findings suggest that age plays an important role in the neuroplastic mechanisms of initial antipsychotics on the hippocampus and amygdala of schizophrenia.

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