Eye Movement Abnormalities Can Distinguish First-Episode Schizophrenia, Chronic Schizophrenia, and Prodromal Patients From Healthy Controls

Author:

Lyu Hailong12ORCID,St Clair David3,Wu Renrong2ORCID,Benson Philip J4,Guo Wenbin2,Wang Guodong2,Liu Yi5,Hu Shaohua1,Zhao Jingping2

Affiliation:

1. Department of Psychiatry, The First Affiliated Hospital, Zhejiang University School of Medicine; Key Laboratory of Mental Disorder’s Management of Zhejiang Province , Hangzhou , China

2. Department of Psychiatry and National Clinical Research Center for Mental Disorders, The Second Xiangya Hospital of Central South University , Changsha , China

3. Division of Applied Medicine, Institute of Medical Sciences, University of Aberdeen , Aberdeen , UK

4. Department of Psychology, University of Aberdeen , Aberdeen , UK

5. Department of Psychiatry, The Affiliated Brain Hospital of Guangzhou Medical University , Guangzhou , China

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundThis study attempts to replicate in a Chinese population an earlier UK report that eye movement abnormalities can accurately distinguish schizophrenia (SCZ) cases from healthy controls (HCs). It also seeks to determine whether first-episode SCZ differ from chronic SCZ and whether these eye movement abnormalities are enriched in psychosis risk syndrome (PRS).MethodsThe training set included 104 Chinese HC and 60 Chinese patients with SCZ, and the testing set included 20 SCZ patients and 20 HC from a UK cohort. An additional 16 individuals with PRS were also enrolled. Eye movements of all participants were recorded during free-viewing, smooth pursuit, and fixation stability tasks. Group differences in 55 performance measures were compared and a gradient-boosted decision tree model was built for predictive analyses.ResultsExtensive eye-movement abnormalities were observed in patients with SCZ on almost all eye-movement tests. On almost all individual variables, first-episode patients showed no statistically significant differences compared with chronic patients. The classification model was able to discriminate patients from controls with an area under the curve of 0.87; the model also classified 88% of PRS individuals as SCZ-like.ConclusionsOur findings replicate and extend the UK results. The overall accuracy of the Chinese study is virtually identical to the UK findings. We conclude that eye-movement abnormalities appear early in the natural history of the disorder and can be considered as potential trait markers for SCZ diathesis.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Zhejiang Provincial Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Psychiatry and Mental health

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