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Polygenic scores for schizophrenia and general cognitive ability: associations with six cognitive domains, premorbid intelligence, and cognitive composite score in individuals with a psychotic disorder and in healthy controls

Cognitive impairments are considered core features in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. Cognitive impairments are, to a lesser degree, also documented in healthy first-degree relatives. Although recent studies have shown (negative) genetic correlations between schizophrenia and general co...

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Published in:Translational psychiatry 2020-11, Vol.10 (1), p.416, Article 416
Main Authors: Engen, Magnus Johan, Lyngstad, Siv Hege, Ueland, Torill, Simonsen, Carmen Elisabeth, Vaskinn, Anja, Smeland, Olav, Bettella, Francesco, Lagerberg, Trine Vik, Djurovic, Srdjan, Andreassen, Ole A., Melle, Ingrid
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description Cognitive impairments are considered core features in schizophrenia and other psychotic disorders. Cognitive impairments are, to a lesser degree, also documented in healthy first-degree relatives. Although recent studies have shown (negative) genetic correlations between schizophrenia and general cognitive ability, the association between polygenic risk for schizophrenia and individual cognitive phenotypes remains unclear. We here investigated the association between a polygenic score for schizophrenia (SCZ PGS ) and six well-defined cognitive domains, in addition to a composite measure of cognitive ability and a measure of premorbid intellectual ability in 731 participants with a psychotic disorder and 851 healthy controls. We also investigated the association between a PGS for general cognitive ability (COG PGS ) and the same cognitive domains in the same sample. We found no significant associations between the SCZ PGS and any cognitive phenotypes, in either patients with a psychotic disorder or healthy controls. For COG PGS we observed stronger associations with cognitive phenotypes in healthy controls than in participants with psychotic disorders. In healthy controls, the association between COG PGS (at the p value threshold of ≥0.01) and working memory remained significant after Bonferroni correction ( β  = 0.12, p  = 8.6 × 10 −5 ). Altogether, the lack of associations between SCZ PGS and COG PGS with cognitive performance in participants with psychotic disorders suggests that either environmental factors or unassessed genetic factors play a role in the development of cognitive impairments in psychotic disorders. Working memory should be further studied as an important cognitive phenotype.
doi_str_mv 10.1038/s41398-020-01094-9
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subjects 45/43
631/208/2489
692/53/2423
Behavioral Sciences
Biological Psychology
Cognitive ability
Medicine
Medicine & Public Health
Neurosciences
Pharmacotherapy
Psychiatry
Psychosis
Schizophrenia
title Polygenic scores for schizophrenia and general cognitive ability: associations with six cognitive domains, premorbid intelligence, and cognitive composite score in individuals with a psychotic disorder and in healthy controls
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