Diaz Alexandre Paim, Cuellar Valeria A, Vinson Elizabeth L, Suchting Robert, Durkin Kathryn, Fernandes Brisa S, Scaini Giselli, Kazimi Iram, Zunta-Soares Giovana B, Quevedo João, Sanches Marsal, Soares Jair C
Center of Excellence on Mood Disorders, McGovern Medical School, Faillace Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, United States.
Translational Psychiatry Program, Faillace Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, McGovern Medical School, The University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston, Houston, TX, United States.
Front Psychiatry. 2021 Jun 4;12:671840. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2021.671840. eCollection 2021.
The aims of this article are to discuss the rationale, design, and procedures of the Greater Houston Area Bipolar Registry (HBR), which aims at contributing to the effort involved in the investigation of neurobiological mechanisms underlying bipolar disorder (BD) as well as to identify clinical and neurobiological markers able to predict BD clinical course. The article will also briefly discuss examples of other initiatives that have made fundamental contributions to the field. This will be a longitudinal study with participants aged 6-17 at the time of enrollment. Participants will be required to meet diagnostic criteria for BD, or to be offspring of a parent with BD. We will also enroll healthy controls. Besides clinical information, which includes neurocognitive performance, participants will be asked to provide blood and saliva samples as well as to perform neuroimaging exams at baseline and follow-ups. Several studies point to the existence of genetic, inflammatory, and brain imaging alterations between individuals at higher genetic risk for BD compared with healthy controls. Longitudinal designs have shown high conversion rates to BD among high-risk offspring, with attempts to identify clinical predictors of disease onset, as well as clarifying the burden associated with environmental stressors. The HBR will help in the worldwide effort investigating the clinical course and neurobiological mechanisms of affected and high-risk children and adolescents with BD.
本文旨在探讨大休斯顿地区双相情感障碍登记处(HBR)的基本原理、设计和程序,其目的是推动双相情感障碍(BD)潜在神经生物学机制的研究工作,并识别能够预测BD临床病程的临床和神经生物学标志物。本文还将简要讨论其他对该领域做出重要贡献的项目实例。这将是一项纵向研究,入组时参与者年龄在6至17岁之间。参与者需符合BD的诊断标准,或者是BD患者的后代。我们还将招募健康对照。除了包括神经认知表现在内的临床信息外,参与者还将被要求在基线和随访时提供血液和唾液样本,并进行神经影像学检查。多项研究指出,与健康对照相比,BD遗传风险较高的个体存在基因、炎症和脑成像改变。纵向研究设计显示,高危后代中BD的转化率很高,旨在识别疾病发作的临床预测因素,并阐明与环境应激源相关的负担。HBR将有助于全球范围内对受影响的BD儿童和青少年以及高危儿童和青少年的临床病程和神经生物学机制进行研究。