Fernandez Thomas V, Leckman James F, Pittenger Christopher
Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States; Department of Psychiatry, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Child Study Center, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States; Department of Psychology, Yale University School of Medicine, New Haven, CT, United States.
Handb Clin Neurol. 2018;148:767-781. doi: 10.1016/B978-0-444-64076-5.00049-1.
Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) is present in 1.5-2.5% of the population and can result in substantial lifelong disability. It is characterized by intrusive thoughts, sensations, and urges and by repetitive behaviors that are difficult to control despite, in most cases, preserved insight as to their excessive or irrational nature. The causes and underlying pathophysiology of OCD are not well understood, which has limited the development of new treatments and interventions. Despite evidence for a substantial genetic contribution to disease risk, identification and replication of genetic variants associated with OCD have been challenging. Decades of candidate gene association studies have provided little insight. They are now being supplanted by modern genomewide approaches to discover both common and rare sequence and structural variants. Studies to date suggest potential novel therapeutic avenues such as modulators of glutamatergic and immune pathways; however, individual genetic findings are not yet statistically robust or replicated. Further efforts are clearly needed to identify specific risk variants and to confirm vulnerable pathways by studying much larger cohorts of patients with comprehensive variant discovery approaches. Mouse knockout models have already made notable inroads into our understanding of OCD pathology; their utility will only increase as specific risk alleles are identified.
强迫症(OCD)在1.5%-2.5%的人群中存在,可导致严重的终身残疾。其特征是存在侵入性思维、感觉和冲动,以及重复性的行为,尽管在大多数情况下患者对这些行为的过度或不合理性质有自知之明,但仍难以控制。强迫症的病因和潜在病理生理学尚未完全明确,这限制了新治疗方法和干预措施的开发。尽管有证据表明遗传因素对疾病风险有很大影响,但与强迫症相关的基因变异的识别和复制一直具有挑战性。数十年的候选基因关联研究几乎没有提供什么有价值的见解。它们现在正被现代全基因组方法所取代,以发现常见和罕见的序列及结构变异。迄今为止的研究表明了一些潜在的新治疗途径,如谷氨酸能和免疫途径的调节剂;然而,个体遗传研究结果在统计学上尚不稳健,也未得到重复验证。显然需要进一步努力,通过研究更大规模的患者队列并采用全面的变异发现方法,来识别特定的风险变异并确认相关的易损途径。小鼠基因敲除模型已经在我们对强迫症病理学的理解方面取得了显著进展;随着特定风险等位基因的识别,其效用只会增加。