Longitudinal allometry of sulcal morphology in health and schizophrenia

Author:

Janssen JoostORCID,Alloza ClaraORCID,Díaz-Caneja Covadonga M.,Santonja Javier,Pina-Camacho LauraORCID,Gordaliza Pedro M.,Fernández-Pena AlbertoORCID,Lois Noemi González,Buimer Elizabeth E.L.ORCID,van Haren Neeltje E.M.ORCID,Cahn WiepkeORCID,Vieta Eduardo,Castro-Fornieles JosefinaORCID,Bernardo MiquelORCID,Parellada Mara,Arango CelsoORCID,Kahn René S.ORCID,Hulshoff Pol Hilleke E.ORCID,Schnack Hugo G.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractScaling between subcomponents of cortical folding and total brain volume (TBV) in healthy individuals (HI) is allometric, i.e. non-linear. It is unclear whether this is also true in individuals with schizophrenia (SZ) or first-episode psychosis (FEP). The current study first confirmed normative allometric scaling norms in HI using discovery and replication samples. Cross-sectional and longitudinal diagnostic differences in folding subcomponents were then assessed using an allometric analytic framework.Structural imaging from a longitudinal (sample 1: HI and SZ, nHI Baseline = 298, nSZ Baseline = 169, nHI Follow-up = 293, nSZ Follow-up = 168, a total of 1087 images, all individuals ≥ 2 images, age 16-69 years) and a cross-sectional sample (sample 2: nHI = 61 and nFEP = 89, age 10-30 years) is leveraged to calculate global folding and its nested subcomponents: sulcation index (SI, total sulcal/cortical hull area) and determinants of sulcal area; sulcal length and sulcal depth.Scaling of the SI, sulcal area, and sulcal length with TBV in SZ and FEP was allometric and did not differ from HI. Longitudinal age trajectories demonstrated steeper loss of SI and sulcal area through adulthood in SZ. Longitudinal allometric analysis revealed that both annual change in SI and sulcal area was significantly stronger related to change in TBV in SZ compared to HI.Our results detail the first evidence of the disproportionate contribution of changes in SI and sulcal area to TBV changes in SZ. Longitudinal allometric analysis of sulcal morphology provides deeper insight into lifespan trajectories of cortical folding in SZ.

Publisher

Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory

Reference64 articles.

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