Department of Psychiatry, Washington University School of Medicine, St Louis, MO, USA.
Department of Psychiatry, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard Medical School, Boston, MA, USA.
Nature. 2022 Mar;603(7902):654-660. doi: 10.1038/s41586-022-04492-9. Epub 2022 Mar 16.
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) has transformed our understanding of the human brain through well-replicated mapping of abilities to specific structures (for example, lesion studies) and functions (for example, task functional MRI (fMRI)). Mental health research and care have yet to realize similar advances from MRI. A primary challenge has been replicating associations between inter-individual differences in brain structure or function and complex cognitive or mental health phenotypes (brain-wide association studies (BWAS)). Such BWAS have typically relied on sample sizes appropriate for classical brain mapping (the median neuroimaging study sample size is about 25), but potentially too small for capturing reproducible brain-behavioural phenotype associations. Here we used three of the largest neuroimaging datasets currently available-with a total sample size of around 50,000 individuals-to quantify BWAS effect sizes and reproducibility as a function of sample size. BWAS associations were smaller than previously thought, resulting in statistically underpowered studies, inflated effect sizes and replication failures at typical sample sizes. As sample sizes grew into the thousands, replication rates began to improve and effect size inflation decreased. More robust BWAS effects were detected for functional MRI (versus structural), cognitive tests (versus mental health questionnaires) and multivariate methods (versus univariate). Smaller than expected brain-phenotype associations and variability across population subsamples can explain widespread BWAS replication failures. In contrast to non-BWAS approaches with larger effects (for example, lesions, interventions and within-person), BWAS reproducibility requires samples with thousands of individuals.
磁共振成像(MRI)通过将特定结构(例如,病变研究)和功能(例如,任务功能 MRI(fMRI))与能力的精确映射,改变了我们对人类大脑的理解。心理健康研究和护理尚未从 MRI 中获得类似的进展。主要挑战之一是复制个体之间大脑结构或功能的差异与复杂认知或心理健康表型(全脑关联研究(BWAS))之间的关联。此类 BWAS 通常依赖于适合经典大脑映射的样本量(神经影像学研究的中位数样本量约为 25),但对于捕获可重复的大脑-行为表型关联可能太小。在这里,我们使用了目前可用的三个最大的神经影像学数据集,总样本量约为 50,000 人,以量化 BWAS 效应大小和可重复性作为样本量的函数。BWAS 关联比之前认为的要小,导致统计功效不足、效应大小膨胀和典型样本量的复制失败。随着样本量增加到数千,复制率开始提高,效应大小膨胀减小。对于功能 MRI(与结构相比)、认知测试(与心理健康问卷相比)和多变量方法(与单变量相比),检测到更稳健的 BWAS 效应。比预期小的大脑表型关联和人群亚样本之间的变异性可以解释广泛的 BWAS 复制失败。与具有更大效应的非 BWAS 方法(例如,病变、干预和个体内)相反,BWAS 可重复性需要数千个人的样本。