Sanchez-Ruiz Jorge A, Coombes Brandon J, Pazdernik Vanessa M, Melhuish Beaupre Lindsay M, Jenkins Greg D, Pendegraft Richard S, Batzler Anthony, Ozerdem Aysegul, McElroy Susan L, Gardea-Resendez Manuel A, Cuellar-Barboza Alfredo B, Prieto Miguel L, Frye Mark A, Biernacka Joanna M
Department of Psychiatry & Psychology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Department of Quantitative Health Sciences, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN, USA.
Mol Psychiatry. 2024 Sep;29(9):2701-2713. doi: 10.1038/s41380-024-02530-8. Epub 2024 Mar 28.
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.
双相情感障碍是一种慢性、复杂的多基因疾病,共病率很高。然而,双相情感障碍的诊断或遗传风险对该疾病患者医疗共病情况的独立影响仍未得到解决。在此,我们使用梅奥诊所生物样本库和梅奥诊所双相情感障碍生物样本库中参与者电子健康记录衍生的表型组,对双相情感障碍进行了多步骤全表型组关联研究(PheWAS)。首先,我们通过基于表型的PheWAS,然后进行LASSO惩罚回归以考虑表型组内的相关性,探索与双相情感障碍诊断相关的疾病。然后,我们使用基于多基因风险评分(PRS)的PheWAS和顺序排除方法,探索与双相情感障碍多基因风险评分(BD-PRS)相关的疾病,以考虑诊断而非遗传风险可能驱动此类关联的可能性。纳入了53386名参与者(58.7%为女性),分析时的平均年龄为67.8岁(标准差=15.6)。双相情感障碍诊断(n = 1479)与更高的精神疾病、损伤和中毒、内分泌/代谢和神经系统疾病、丙型病毒性肝炎以及哮喘发病率相关。BD-PRS与精神疾病共病相关,但相比之下,与一般医疗状况无正相关。虽然我们的研究结果需要纵向前瞻性研究来证实,但双相情感障碍遗传学与医疗状况之间有限的关联表明,共享环境效应或诊断的环境后果可能比其遗传风险对双相情感障碍患者的一般医疗共病情况有更大影响。