Ontology highlight
ABSTRACT: Background and hypothesis
Previous studies have reported effects of antipsychotic treatment and illness duration on brain features. This study used a machine learning approach to examine whether these factors in aggregate impacted the utility of MRI features for differentiating individual schizophrenia patients from healthy controls.Study design
This case-control study used patients with never-treated first-episode schizophrenia (FES, n = 179) and long-term ill schizophrenia (LTSZ, n = 30), with follow-up of the FES group after treatment (n = 71), a group of patients who had received long-term antipsychotic treatment (n = 93) and age and sex-matched healthy controls (n = 373) for each patient group. A multiple kernel learning classifier combining both structural and functional brain features was used to discriminate individual patients from controls.Study results
MRI features differentiated untreated FES (0.73) and LTSZ (0.83) patients from healthy controls with moderate accuracy, but accuracy was significantly higher in antipsychotic-treated FES (0.94) and LTSZ (0.98) patients. Treatment was associated with significantly increased accuracy of case identification in both early course and long-term ill patients (both p < .001). Effects of illness duration, examined separately in treated and untreated patients, were less robust.Conclusions
Our results demonstrate that initiation of antipsychotic treatment alters brain features in ways that further distinguish individual schizophrenia patients from healthy individuals, and have a modest effect of illness duration. Intrinsic illness-related brain alterations in untreated patients, regardless of illness duration, are not sufficiently robust for accurate identification of schizophrenia patients.
SUBMITTER: Zeng J
PROVIDER: S-EPMC9673268 | biostudies-literature | 2022 Nov
REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature
Zeng Jiaxin J Zhang Wenjing W Wu Guorong G Wang Xiaowan X Shah Chandan C Li Siyi S Xiao Yuan Y Yao Li L Cao Hengyi H Li Zhenlin Z Sweeney John A JA Lui Su S Gong Qiyong Q
Schizophrenia bulletin 20221101 6
<h4>Background and hypothesis</h4>Previous studies have reported effects of antipsychotic treatment and illness duration on brain features. This study used a machine learning approach to examine whether these factors in aggregate impacted the utility of MRI features for differentiating individual schizophrenia patients from healthy controls.<h4>Study design</h4>This case-control study used patients with never-treated first-episode schizophrenia (FES, n = 179) and long-term ill schizophrenia (LTS ...[more]