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The use of polygenic risk scores to identify phenotypes associated with genetic risk of schizophrenia: Systematic review.

TLDR
Overall, SZ-PRS was associated with increased risk for psychiatric disorders such as depression and bipolar disorder, lower performance IQ and negative symptoms, and a framework is proposed to guide robust reporting of PRS associations in the future.
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This article is published in Schizophrenia Research.The article was published on 2017-11-10 and is currently open access. It has received 115 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Bipolar disorder & Schizophrenia.

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Citations
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Apparent latent structure within the UK Biobank sample has implications for epidemiological analysis

TL;DR: It is found that major health outcomes appear geographically structured and that coincident structure in health outcomes and genotype data can yield biased associations, and that fine-scale structure is detectable in apparently homogeneous samples such as ALSPAC when measured very precisely, and remains detectable in UK Biobank despite conventional approaches to account for it.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

Genetic liability for schizophrenia predicts risk of immune disorders.

TL;DR: The results suggest that genetic factors are shared between schizophrenia and immune disorders, and contributes to an accumulating body of evidence that immune processes may play a role in the etiology of schizophrenia.
Journal ArticleDOI

Schizophrenia genetic variants are not associated with intelligence.

A. F. Terwisscha van Scheltinga, +201 more
TL;DR: In this article, the authors found that rare and common schizophrenia-associated variants do not explain the variation in IQ in healthy subjects or in schizophrenia patients, and that reductions in IQ may be secondary to other processes related to schizophrenia risk.
Journal ArticleDOI

Anxiety disorder comorbidity in bipolar disorder, schizophrenia and schizoaffective disorder.

TL;DR: The findings suggest that patients with SZA have high rates of anxiety disorders, and clinicians treating patients withSZA should evaluate for anxiety disorder comorbidity, especially as anxiety symptoms may not be reported at first presentation.

Schizophrenia genetic variants are not associated with intelligence | NOVA. The University of Newcastle's Digital Repository

A. F. Terwisscha van Scheltinga, +200 more
Journal ArticleDOI

Using Clinical Characteristics to Identify Which Patients With Major Depressive Disorder Have a Higher Genetic Load for Three Psychiatric Disorders

TL;DR: MDD patients with early age at onset and higher symptom severity have an increased genetic risk for three major psychiatric disorders, suggesting that it is useful to create phenotypically more homogenous groups when searching for genes associated with MDD.
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Frequently Asked Questions (9)
Q1. What are the contributions mentioned in the paper "The use of polygenic risk scores to identify phenotypes associated with genetic risk of schizophrenia: systematic review" ?

This paper conducted a systematic review to identify studies that have used a polygenic risk score ( PRS ) approach to examine phenotypes associated with genetic risk for schizophrenia. 

One of the main advantages of the PRS approach is the ability to study how genetic risk for schizophrenia is manifest across the general population, and during different stages of development. 

Future increases in size of discovery samples may also enable PRSs to make a meaningful contribution to risk prediction models, as has been shown for some non-psychiatric disorders (Chatterjee et al. 2016). 

The population-based Longitudinal Experiences and Perceptions (LEAP) study found that SZPRS was associated with decreased anhedonia (strongest PT<0.5; one-tailed p=0.003) and parent-rated negative symptoms in adolescence (one-tailed p=0.029) (Sieradzka et al. 2014). 

The SZ-PRS was consistently associated with poorer cognition in population-based studies and from childhood through to older age (McIntosh et al. 2013; Hubbard et al. 2016). 

In the Netherlands case-control study of schizophrenia, SZ-PRS was associated with five symptom dimensions (strongest PT<0.5): positive (p=<0.01), negative (p= <0.001), mania (p= <0.01), depression (p= <0.001) and disorganisation (p=0.04) within the combined casecontrol sample, but not with these dimensions in cases and controls examined separately (Derks et al. 2012). 

the inconsistency of reporting of results across studies meant that only a narrative approach to this review was feasible, and assessment of publication bias was not possible. 

The SZ-PRS was also associated with a number of other, non-psychiatric outcomes, including diabetes, RA and CD (Stringer et al. 2014), though results were not consistent across studies. 

Higher SZ-PRS was associated with lower total IQ in a combined schizophrenia case–control sample (strongest PT<0.3, p=8x10-4), but this was attenuated when analysing cases only (p=0.067), with no association in controls (van Scheltinga et al. 2013).