Abstract

MRI‐derived brain measures offer a link between genes, the environment and behavior and have been widely studied in bipolar disorder (BD). However, many neuroimaging studies of BD have been underpowered, leading to varied results and uncertainty regarding effects. The Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta‐Analysis (ENIGMA) Bipolar Disorder Working Group was formed in 2012 to empower discoveries, generate consensus findings and inform future hypothesis‐driven studies of BD. Through this effort, over 150 researchers from 20 countries and 55 institutions pool data and resources to produce the largest neuroimaging studies of BD ever conducted. The ENIGMA Bipolar Disorder Working Group applies standardized processing and analysis techniques to empower large‐scale meta‐ and mega‐analyses of multimodal brain MRI and improve the replicability of studies relating brain variation to clinical and genetic data. Initial BD Working Group studies reveal widespread patterns of lower cortical thickness, subcortical volume and disrupted white matter integrity associated with BD. Findings also include mapping brain alterations of common medications like lithium, symptom patterns and clinical risk profiles and have provided further insights into the pathophysiological mechanisms of BD. Here we discuss key findings from the BD working group, its ongoing projects and future directions for large‐scale, collaborative studies of mental illness.

Highlights

  • Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe mental disorder characterized by episodic alterations in mood and activity levels including depression, hypomania and mania

  • This is reflected in current diagnostic classification systems, namely the DSM-5 (APA, 2013) and ICD-10 (WHO, 1993; https://apps.who.int/iris/handle/10665/246208), which use the number and profile of symptoms to delineate the unique and overlapping clinical features of mental disorders, and allow individuals to be categorized based on threshold criteria (BD diagnosis criteria provided in Supplemental Materials)

  • The Enhancing Neuro Imaging Genetics through Meta-Analysis (ENIGMA) Bipolar Disorder Working Group has published five peer-reviewed studies, each representing the largest neuroimaging studies of their kind and helping to answer the question of which brain structures are reliably associated with BD, its subtypes, and other clinical measures such as illness duration, severity, genetic risk, and common medications

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Summary

Introduction

Bipolar disorder (BD) is a severe mental disorder characterized by episodic alterations in mood and activity levels including depression, hypomania and mania. To contribute to a recent shift in psychiatry toward large consortium efforts, the ENIGMA Bipolar Disorder Working Group was formed to pool data, expertise and computational resources to discover factors that reliably affect brain structure and function in BD.

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