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  4. Longitudinal Associations Between Self-reported Schizotypy Dimensions and White Matter Integrity Development During Adolescence
 
review article

Longitudinal Associations Between Self-reported Schizotypy Dimensions and White Matter Integrity Development During Adolescence

Derome, Melodie
•
Amir, Suje  
•
Sprungli-Toffel, Elodie
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March 4, 2025
Schizophrenia Bulletin

Background Alterations of white matter microstructure have been reported in the psychosis spectrum. However, the development of these alterations during preclinical stages remains poorly understood. The framework proposed by schizotypy research as the personality base for liability to develop psychosis spectrum disorders offers 3 interconnected dimensions thought to impact neurodevelopment, affording an opportunity to investigate premorbid risk.Design In this study, 102 typically developing individuals aged between 12 and 20 y.o. at baseline were scanned longitudinally between 1 and 4 times, and schizotypy was assessed at each visit. Ten white matter tracts were reconstructed using TRACULA, and mixed model regression was used to characterize age-related changes in main diffusion parameters (ie, fractional anisotropy [FA]). Estimated longitudinal trajectories of the 3 dimensions of schizotypy were tested for different trajectories of diffusion parameters as a function of age.Results Positive schizotypy trajectory was the most strongly decreased when FA in the anterior thalamic radiation (atr-FA) increased in young adults compared with a moderate decrease in younger participants. Furthermore, in adolescents, disorganized schizotypy followed a steep increase when atr-FA increased, while in the older participants, it decreased as a function of atr-FA. Independent of age, intraindividual positive schizotypy was further longitudinally negatively associated with FA in the cingulate gyrus, and disorganized schizotypy was positively associated with FA in the superior longitudinal fasciculus.Conclusions Given that abnormalities in fronto-thalamo-cingulate subcircuit are present in schizophrenia and converters to psychosis, our results support the hypothesis of schizotypy as a personality base risk to develop psychosis.

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Type
review article
DOI
10.1093/schbul/sbad147
Web of Science ID

WOS:001437533300006

PubMed ID

40037830

Author(s)
Derome, Melodie

University of Geneva

Amir, Suje  

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

Sprungli-Toffel, Elodie

Vaud Univ Hosp Ctr

Salaminios, George

University of London

Fonsecapedrero, Eduardo

Universidad de La Rioja

Debbane, Martin

University of London

Date Issued

2025-03-04

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS

Published in
Schizophrenia Bulletin
Volume

51

Issue

Supplement_2

Start page

S126

End page

S136

Subjects

schizophrenia

•

neuroimaging

•

early detection

Editorial or Peer reviewed

REVIEWED

Written at

EPFL

EPFL units
UPCOURTINE  
FunderFunding(s)Grant NumberGrant URL

Swiss National Science Foundation (SNSF)

100019_159440;P2GEP1_200019

Available on Infoscience
March 18, 2025
Use this identifier to reference this record
https://infoscience.epfl.ch/handle/20.500.14299/247948
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