Evaluating the role of common risk variation in the recurrence risk of schizophrenia in multiplex schizophrenia families

Author:

Ahangari Mohammad,Gentry Amanda E.,Riley Brien P.,Morris Derek W.,O’Dushlaine Colm T.,Cormican Paul,Kenny Elaine M.,Wormley Brandon,Donohoe Gary,Quinn Emma,Judge Roisin,Coleman Kim,Tropea Daniela,Roche Siobhan,Cummings Liz,Kelleher Eric,McKeon Patrick,Dinan Ted,McDonald Colm,Murphy Kieran C.,O’Callaghan Eadbhard,O’Neill Francis A.,Waddington John L.,Kendler Kenneth S.,Gill Michael,Corvin Aiden,Nguyen Tan-HoangORCID,Kirkpatrick Robert,Verrelli Brian C.ORCID,Bacanu Silviu-AlinORCID,Kendler Kenneth S.ORCID,Webb Bradley T.,Riley Brien P.ORCID,

Abstract

AbstractMultiplex families have higher recurrence risk of schizophrenia compared to the families of sporadic cases, but the source of this increased recurrence risk is unknown. We used schizophrenia genome-wide association study data (N = 156,509) to construct polygenic risk scores (PRS) in 1005 individuals from 257 multiplex schizophrenia families, 2114 ancestry-matched sporadic cases, and 2205 population controls, to evaluate whether increased PRS can explain the higher recurrence risk of schizophrenia in multiplex families compared to ancestry-matched sporadic cases. Using mixed-effects logistic regression with family structure modeled as a random effect, we show that SCZ PRS in familial cases does not differ significantly from sporadic cases either with, or without family history (FH) of psychotic disorders (All sporadic cases p = 0.90, FH+ cases p = 0.88, FH− cases p = 0.82). These results indicate that increased burden of common schizophrenia risk variation as indexed by current SCZ PRS, is unlikely to account for the higher recurrence risk of schizophrenia in multiplex families. In the absence of elevated PRS, segregation of rare risk variation or environmental influences unique to the families may explain the increased familial recurrence risk. These findings also further validate a genetically influenced psychosis spectrum, as shown by a continuous increase of common SCZ risk variation burden from unaffected relatives to schizophrenia cases in multiplex families. Finally, these results suggest that common risk variation loading are unlikely to be predictive of schizophrenia recurrence risk in the families of index probands, and additional components of genetic risk must be identified and included in order to improve recurrence risk prediction.

Funder

U.S. Department of Health & Human Services | NIH | National Institute of Mental Health

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Biological Psychiatry,Cellular and Molecular Neuroscience,Psychiatry and Mental health

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