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Limited association between infections, autoimmune disease and genetic risk and immune activation in severe mental disorders

Permanent link
https://hdl.handle.net/10037/26205
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.pnpbp.2022.110511
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Date
2022-01-19
Type
Journal article
Tidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed

Author
Werner, Maren Caroline Frogner; Wirgenes, Katrine Verena; Shadrin, Alexey; Lunding, Synve Hoffart; Rødevand, Linn; Hjell, Gabriela; Ormerod, Monica; Haram, Marit; Agartz, Ingrid; Djurovic, Srdjan; Melle, Ingrid; Aukrust, Pål; Ueland, Thor; Andreassen, Ole; Steen, Nils Eiel
Abstract
Background: Low-grade inflammation may be part of the underlying mechanism of schizophrenia and bipolar disorder. We investigated if genetic susceptibility, infections or autoimmunity could explain the immune activation.

Results: Infection rate differed between all groups (BD > HC > SCZ, all p < 0.001) whereas autoimmune disease was more frequent in BD compared to SCZ (p = 0.004) and HC (p = 0.003). sIL-2R was positively associated with autoimmune disease (p = 0.001) and negatively associated with PRS of SCZ (p = 0.006) across SCZ and HC; however, associations represented only small changes in the difference of sIL-2R levels between SCZ and HC.

Conclusion: There were few significant associations between rate of infections, autoimmune disease or PRS and altered immune markers in SCZ and BD, and the detected associations represented only small changes in the immune aberrations. The findings suggest that most of the low-grade inflammation in SCZ and BD is explained by other factors than the underlying PRS, autoimmunity and infection rates.

Publisher
Elsevier
Citation
Werner, Wirgenes, Shadrin, Lunding, Rødevand, Hjell, Ormerod, Haram, Agartz, Djurovic, Melle, Aukrust, Ueland, Andreassen, Steen. Limited association between infections, autoimmune disease and genetic risk and immune activation in severe mental disorders. Progress in Neuro-psychopharmacology and Biological Psychiatry. 2022;116
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