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Atlas of Gray Matter Volume Differences Across Psychiatric Conditions: A Systematic Review With a Novel Meta-Analysis That Considers Co-Occurring Disorders

Authors
 Fortea, Lydia  ;  Ortuno, Maria  ;  De Prisco, Michele  ;  Oliva, Vincenzo  ;  Albajes-Eizagirre, Anton  ;  Fortea, Adriana  ;  Madero, Santiago  ;  Solanes, Aleix  ;  Vilajosana, Enric  ;  Yao, Yuanwei  ;  Del Fabro, Lorenzo  ;  Sole, Eduard  ;  Verdolini, Norma  ;  Farre-Colomes, Alvar  ;  Serra-Blasco, Maria  ;  Pico-Perez, Maria  ;  Lukito, Steve  ;  Wise, Toby  ;  Carlisi, Christina  ;  Arnone, Danilo  ;  Kempton, Matthew J.  ;  Hauson, Alexander Omar  ;  Wollman, Scott  ;  Soriano-Mas, Carles  ;  Rubia, Katya  ;  Norman, Luke  ;  Fusar-Poli, Paolo  ;  Mataix-Cols, David  ;  Valenti, Marc  ;  Via, Esther  ;  Cardoner, Narcis  ;  Solmi, Marco  ;  Zhang, Jintao  ;  Pan, Pinglei  ;  Il Shin, Jae  ;  Fullana, Miquel A.  ;  Vieta, Eduard  ;  Radua, Joaquim 
Citation
 BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY, Vol.98(1) : 76-90, 2025-07 
Journal Title
BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
ISSN
 0006-3223 
Issue Date
2025-07
MeSH
Adult ; Comorbidity ; Gray Matter* / diagnostic imaging ; Gray Matter* / pathology ; Humans ; Magnetic Resonance Imaging ; Mental Disorders* / diagnostic imaging ; Mental Disorders* / pathology ; Organ Size
Keywords
Anxiety disorders ; Comorbidity ; Gray matter volume ; Major depressive disorder ; Meta-analysis ; Psychiatric conditions
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Regional gray matter volume (GMV) differences between individuals with mental disorders and comparison participants may be confounded by co-occurring disorders. To disentangle disorder-specific GMV correlates, we conducted a large-scale multidisorder meta-analysis using a novel approach that explicitly models co-occurring disorders. METHODS: We systematically reviewed voxel-based morphometry studies indexed in PubMed and Scopus up to January 2023 that compared adults with major mental disorders (anorexia nervosa, schizophrenia spectrum, anxiety, bipolar, major depressive, obsessive-compulsive, and posttraumatic stress disorders plus attention-deficit/hyperactivity, autism spectrum, and borderline personality disorders) with comparison participants. Two authors independently extracted data and assessed quality using the Newcastle-Ottawa Scale. We derived GMV correlates for each disorder using: 1) a multidisorder meta-analysis that accounted for all co-occurring mental disorders simultaneously and 2) separate standard meta-analyses for each disorder in which co-occurring disorders were ignored. We assessed the alterations' extent, intensity (effect size), and specificity (interdisorder correlations and transdiagnostic alterations) for both approaches. RESULTS: We included 433 studies (499 datasets) involving 19,718 patients and 16,441 comparison participants (51% female, ages 20-67 years). We provide GMV correlate maps for each disorder using both approaches. The novel approach, which accounted for co-occurring disorders, produced GMV correlates that were more focal and disorder specific (less correlated across disorders and fewer transdiagnostic abnormalities). CONCLUSIONS: This work offers the most comprehensive atlas of GMV correlates across major mental disorders. Modeling co-occurring disorders yielded more specific correlates, supporting this approach's validity. The atlas NIfTI maps are available online.
Files in This Item:
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DOI
10.1016/j.biopsych.2024.10.020
Appears in Collections:
1. College of Medicine (의과대학) > Dept. of Pediatrics (소아과학교실) > 1. Journal Papers
Yonsei Authors
Shin, Jae Il(신재일) ORCID logo https://orcid.org/0000-0003-2326-1820
URI
https://ir.ymlib.yonsei.ac.kr/handle/22282913/207835
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