Exploring Associations between Grey Matter Volume and Clinical High-Risk for Psychosis: A Transdiagnostic Study Utilizing the NAPLS-2 Risk Calculator in the PRONIA Cohort
L.-M. Neuner, L. Hahn, J. Kambeitz, R. K. Salokangas, J. Hietala, A. Bertolino, S. Borgwardt, P. Brambilla, R. Upthegrove, S. J. Wood, R. Lencer, E. Meisenzahl, P. Falkai, T. D. Cannon, N. Koutsouleris

TL;DR
This study explores how brain structure changes relate to the risk of developing psychosis in individuals at clinical high risk and those with recent-onset depression.
Contribution
The study provides biological validation of the NAPLS-2 risk calculator by linking grey matter volume changes to psychosis risk.
Findings
Increased grey matter volume in the right middle and superior frontal gyrus is associated with higher psychosis risk.
Reduced grey matter volume in the left hippocampus is linked to higher psychosis risk.
The findings support the role of hippocampal and frontal brain regions in psychosis progression.
Abstract
The clinical high-risk state for psychosis (CHR) is associated with alterations in grey matter volume (GMV) in various regions such as the hippocampus (Vissink et al. BP:GOS 2022; 2(2) 147-152). Within the scope of the North American Prodrome Longitudinal Study (NAPLS-2; Cannon et al. AM J Psychiatry 2016; 173(10), 980-988), a publicly available risk calculator based on clinical variables was developed to assess the likelihood of individuals to transition to psychosis within a 2-year period. In the current study, we aim to examine the association between GMV and NAPLS-2 risk scores calculated for individuals with CHR and recent-onset depression (ROD), taking a transdiagnostic approach on the transition to psychosis. The sample consisted of 315 CHR (M = 23.85, SD = ± 5.64; female: 164) and 295 ROD (M = 25.11, SD = ± 6.21; female: 144) patients from the multi-site Personalised…
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Taxonomy
TopicsHealth, Environment, Cognitive Aging · Health Systems, Economic Evaluations, Quality of Life · Psoriasis: Treatment and Pathogenesis
