Clinical and genetic contributions to medical comorbidity in bipolar disorder: a study using electronic health records-linked biobank data

被引:0
|
作者
Sanchez-Ruiz, Jorge A. [1 ]
Coombes, Brandon J. [2 ]
Pazdernik, Vanessa M. [2 ]
Melhuish Beaupre, Lindsay M. [2 ]
Jenkins, Greg D. [2 ]
Pendegraft, Richard S. [2 ]
Batzler, Anthony [2 ]
Ozerdem, Aysegul [1 ]
McElroy, Susan L. [3 ]
Gardea-Resendez, Manuel A. [1 ,4 ]
Cuellar-Barboza, Alfredo B. [1 ,4 ]
Prieto, Miguel L. [1 ,5 ,6 ]
Frye, Mark A. [1 ]
Biernacka, Joanna M. [1 ,2 ]
机构
[1] Dept Psychiat & Psychol, Mayo Clin, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
[2] Mayo Clin, Dept Quantitat Hlth Sci, Rochester, MN 55905 USA
[3] Univ Cincinnati, Lindner Ctr HOPE, Cincinnati, OH USA
[4] Univ Autonoma Nuevo Leon, Dept Psychiat, Monterrey, Mexico
[5] Univ Andes, Fac Med, Dept Psychiat, Santiago, Chile
[6] Clin Univ Andes, Mental Hlth Serv, Santiago, Chile
关键词
PHENOME-WIDE ASSOCIATION; SPECTRUM DISORDER; PREVALENCE; ILLNESS; PHEWAS; INSULIN; DISEASE; BURDEN;
D O I
10.1038/s41380-024-02530-8
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Bipolar disorder is a chronic and complex polygenic disease with high rates of comorbidity. However, the independent contribution of either diagnosis or genetic risk of bipolar disorder to the medical comorbidity profile of individuals with the disease remains unresolved. Here, we conducted a multi-step phenome-wide association study (PheWAS) of bipolar disorder using phenomes derived from the electronic health records of participants enrolled in the Mayo Clinic Biobank and the Mayo Clinic Bipolar Disorder Biobank. First, we explored the conditions associated with a diagnosis of bipolar disorder by conducting a phenotype-based PheWAS followed by LASSO-penalized regression to account for correlations within the phenome. Then, we explored the conditions associated with bipolar disorder polygenic risk score (BD-PRS) using a PRS-based PheWAS with a sequential exclusion approach to account for the possibility that diagnosis, instead of genetic risk, may drive such associations. 53,386 participants (58.7% women) with a mean age at analysis of 67.8 years (SD = 15.6) were included. A bipolar disorder diagnosis (n = 1479) was associated with higher rates of psychiatric conditions, injuries and poisonings, endocrine/metabolic and neurological conditions, viral hepatitis C, and asthma. BD-PRS was associated with psychiatric comorbidities but, in contrast, had no positive associations with general medical conditions. While our findings warrant confirmation with longitudinal-prospective studies, the limited associations between bipolar disorder genetics and medical conditions suggest that shared environmental effects or environmental consequences of diagnosis may have a greater impact on the general medical comorbidity profile of individuals with bipolar disorder than its genetic risk.
引用
收藏
页码:2701 / 2713
页数:13
相关论文
共 39 条
  • [1] Genetic validation of bipolar disorder identified by automated phenotyping using electronic health records
    Chen, Chia-Yen
    Lee, Phil H.
    Castro, Victor M.
    Minnier, Jessica
    Charney, Alexander W.
    Stahl, Eli A.
    Ruderfer, Douglas M.
    Murphy, Shawn N.
    Gainer, Vivian
    Cai, Tianxi
    Jones, Ian
    Pato, Carlos N.
    Pato, Michele T.
    Landen, Mikael
    Sklar, Pamela
    Perlis, Roy H.
    Smoller, Jordan W.
    TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY, 2018, 8
  • [2] Leveraging electronic health records to study pleiotropic effects on bipolar disorder and medical comorbidities
    Prieto, M. L.
    Ryu, E.
    Jenkins, G. D.
    Batzler, A.
    Nassan, M. M.
    Cuellar-Barboza, A. B.
    Pathak, J.
    McElroy, S. L.
    Frye, M. A.
    Biernacka, J. M.
    TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 6 : e870 - e870
  • [3] Are infections associated with cognitive decline and neuroimaging outcomes? A historical cohort study using data from the UK Biobank study linked to electronic health records
    Muzambi, Rutendo
    Bhaskaran, Krishnan
    Rentsch, Christopher T.
    Smeeth, Liam
    Brayne, Carol
    Garfield, Victoria
    Williams, Dylan M.
    Chaturvedi, Nish
    Warren-Gash, Charlotte
    TRANSLATIONAL PSYCHIATRY, 2022, 12 (01)
  • [4] Quantifying the impact of chronic conditions on a diagnosis of major depressive disorder in adults: a cohort study using linked electronic medical records
    Ryu, Euijung
    Chamberlain, Alanna M.
    Pendegraft, Richard S.
    Petterson, Tanya M.
    Bobo, William V.
    Pathak, Jyotishman
    BMC PSYCHIATRY, 2016, 16
  • [5] Identifying prior signals of bipolar disorder using primary care electronic health records: a nested case-control study
    Morgan, Catharine
    Ashcroft, Darren M.
    Chew-Graham, Carolyn A.
    Sperrin, Matthew
    Webb, Roger
    Francis, Anya
    Scott, Jan
    Yung, Alison R.
    BRITISH JOURNAL OF GENERAL PRACTICE, 2024, 74 (740) : E141 - E148
  • [6] Constraints on Biological Mechanism from Disease Comorbidity Using Electronic Medical Records and Database of Genetic Variants
    Bagley, Steven C.
    Sirota, Marina
    Chen, Richard
    Butte, Atul J.
    Altman, Russ B.
    PLOS COMPUTATIONAL BIOLOGY, 2016, 12 (04)
  • [7] Identification of Early Onset Dementia in Population-Based Health Administrative Data: A Validation Study Using Primary Care Electronic Medical Records
    Jaakkimainen, Liisa
    Duchen, Raquel
    Lix, Lisa
    Al-Azazi, Saeed
    Yu, Bing
    Butt, Debra
    Park, Su-Bin
    Widdifield, Jessica
    JOURNAL OF ALZHEIMERS DISEASE, 2022, 89 (04) : 1463 - 1472
  • [8] Medical burden in bipolar disorder: findings from the Clinical and Health Outcomes Initiative in Comparative Effectiveness for Bipolar Disorder study (Bipolar CHOICE)
    Sylvia, Louisa G.
    Shelton, Richard C.
    Kemp, David E.
    Bernstein, Emily E.
    Friedman, Edward S.
    Brody, Benjamin D.
    McElroy, Susan L.
    Singh, Vivek
    Tohen, Mauricio
    Bowden, Charles L.
    Ketter, Terence A.
    Deckersbach, Thilo
    Thase, Michael E.
    Reilly-Harrington, Noreen A.
    Nierenberg, Andrew A.
    Rabideau, Dustin J.
    Kinrys, Gustavo
    Kocsis, James H.
    Bobo, William V.
    Kamali, Masoud
    McInnis, Melvin G.
    Calabrese, Joseph R.
    BIPOLAR DISORDERS, 2015, 17 (02) : 212 - 223
  • [9] Temporality of clinical factors associated with pancreatic cancer: a case-control study using linked electronic health records
    Ullah, Abu Z. M. Dayem
    Stasinos, Konstantinos
    Chelala, Claude
    Kocher, Hemant M.
    BMC CANCER, 2021, 21 (01)
  • [10] Antibiotic Prescribing Before and After the Diagnosis of Comorbidity: A Cohort Study Using Primary Care Electronic Health Records
    Rockenschaub, Patrick
    Hayward, Andrew
    Shallcross, Laura
    CLINICAL INFECTIOUS DISEASES, 2020, 71 (07) : E50 - E57