Inflammation and cognition in severe mental illness: patterns of covariation and subgroups
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/28509Date
2022-12-28Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Sæther, Linn Sofie; Ueland, Thor; Haatveit, Beathe; Maglanoc, Luigi; Szabo, Attila; Djurovic, Srdjan; Aukrust, Pål; Roelfs, Daniël; Ormerod, Monica Bettina E. Greenwood; Lagerberg, Trine Vik; Steen, Nils Eiel; Melle, Ingrid; Andreassen, Ole; Ueland, Torill; Mohn, ChristineAbstract
A potential relationship between dysregulation of immune/inflammatory pathways and cognitive impairment has been suggested in
severe mental illnesses (SMI), such as schizophrenia (SZ) and bipolar (BD) spectrum disorders. However, multivariate relationships
between peripheral inflammatory/immune-related markers and cognitive domains are unclear, and many studies do not account for
inter-individual variance in both cognitive functioning and inflammatory/immune status. This study aimed to investigate covariance
patterns between inflammatory/immune-related markers and cognitive domains and further elucidate heterogeneity in a large SMI and
healthy control (HC) cohort (SZ = 343, BD = 289, HC = 770). We applied canonical correlation analysis (CCA) to identify modes of
maximum covariation between a comprehensive selection of cognitive domains and inflammatory/immune markers. We found that
poor verbal learning and psychomotor processing speed was associated with higher levels of interleukin-18 system cytokines and beta
defensin 2, reflecting enhanced activation of innate immunity, a pattern augmented in SMI compared to HC. Applying hierarchical
clustering on covariance patterns identified by the CCA revealed a high cognition—low immune dysregulation subgroup with
predominantly HC (24% SZ, 45% BD, 74% HC) and a low cognition—high immune dysregulation subgroup predominantly consisting of
SMI patients (76% SZ, 55% BD, 26% HC). These subgroups differed in IQ, years of education, age, CRP, BMI (all groups), level of
functioning, symptoms and defined daily dose (DDD) of antipsychotics (SMI cohort). Our findings suggest a link between cognitive
impairment and innate immune dysregulation in a subset of individuals with severe mental illness.
Publisher
Springer NatureCitation
Sæther, Ueland, Haatveit, Maglanoc LA, Szabo, Djurovic, Aukrust, Roelfs, Ormerod, Lagerberg, Steen, Melle, Andreassen, Ueland. Inflammation and cognition in severe mental illness: patterns of covariation and subgroups. Molecular Psychiatry. 2022Metadata
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