Background/aims: The Remission in Schizophrenia Working Group has defined remission as 'a low-mild symptom intensity level, maintained for a minimum of 6 months, where such symptoms do not affect an individual's behaviour' [Andreasen et al.: Am J Psychiatry 2005;162:441-449]. Since brain morphology relates to symptomatology, treatment and illness progression, MRI may assist in predicting remission.

Methods: Thirty-nine patients newly diagnosed with DSM-IV schizophrenia underwent MRI brain scan prior to antipsychotic exposure. The Global Assessment of Functioning (GAF) score was entered into a voxel-based analysis to evaluate its relationship with cerebral grey matter volume from the baseline MRI. We entered age, total intracranial volume and intake GAF score as co-variates. Males and females were analysed separately because gender is a potent determinant of outcome.

Results: Males had lower GAF scores than females, both at intake and at 1 year. Males comprised only 40% (12 out of 39) of the early remission group. For females only, early remission was strongly and positively correlated with bilateral lentiform and striatal volumes. For males, there was no such relationship.

Conclusion: Larger striato-thalamic volume correlated with early remission in females only. These baseline MRI findings were unlikely to be confounded by antipsychotic treatment and chronicity. These brain morphological markers show gender dimorphism and may assist in the prediction of early remission in newly diagnosed schizophrenia.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1159/000358837DOI Listing

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