Predictive Performance of Exposome Score for Schizophrenia in the General Population.

Schizophr Bull

Department of Psychiatry and Neuropsychology, School for Mental Health and Neuroscience, Maastricht University Medical Center, Maastricht, The Netherlands.

Published: March 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • A cumulative exposome score for schizophrenia (ES-SCZ) was developed to help identify individuals at risk for schizophrenia spectrum disorders by analyzing environmental factors.
  • The effectiveness of ES-SCZ was tested and compared to two other scoring methods (Esum-SCZ and Emet-SCZ) using statistical measures, with ES-SCZ showing the highest discriminative ability (AUC = 0.84).
  • ES-SCZ was significantly associated with psychiatric diagnoses, particularly schizophrenia, bipolar disorder, and suicide risk, indicating its potential to enhance risk prediction and understanding of the causes behind these mental health issues.

Article Abstract

Previously, we established an estimated exposome score for schizophrenia (ES-SCZ) as a cumulative measure of environmental liability for schizophrenia to use in gene-environment interaction studies and for risk stratification in population cohorts. Hereby, we examined the discriminative function of ES-SCZ for identifying individuals diagnosed with schizophrenia spectrum disorder in the general population by measuring the area under the receiver operating characteristic curve (AUC). Furthermore, we compared this ES-SCZ method to an environmental sum score (Esum-SCZ) and an aggregate environmental score weighted by the meta-analytical estimates (Emet-SCZ). We also estimated ORs and Nagelkerke's R2 for ES-SCZ in association with psychiatric diagnoses and other medical outcomes. ES-SCZ showed a good discriminative function (AUC = 0.84) and statistically significantly performed better than both Esum-SCZ (AUC = 0.80) and Emet-SCZ (AUC = 0.80). At optimal cut point, ES-SCZ showed similar performance in ruling out (LR- = 0.20) and ruling in (LR+ = 3.86) schizophrenia. ES-SCZ at optimal cut point showed also a progressively greater magnitude of association with increasing psychosis risk strata. Among all clinical outcomes, ES-SCZ was associated with schizophrenia diagnosis with the highest OR (2.76, P < .001) and greatest explained variance (R2 = 14.03%), followed by bipolar disorder (OR = 2.61, P < .001, R2 = 13.01%) and suicide plan (OR = 2.44, P < .001, R2 = 12.44%). Our findings from an epidemiologically representative general population cohort demonstrate that an aggregate environmental exposure score for schizophrenia constructed using a predictive modeling approach-ES-SCZ-has the potential to improve risk prediction and stratification for research purposes and may help gain insight into the multicausal etiology of psychopathology.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7965069PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/schbul/sbaa170DOI Listing

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