Identifying genetic differences between bipolar disorder and major depression through multiple genome-wide association analyses
Panagiotaropoulou, Georgia; Hellberg, Kajsa-Lotta Georgii; Coleman, Jonathan R I; Seok, Darsol; Kalman, Janos; Mitchell, Philip B; Schofield, Peter R; Forstner, Andreas J; Bauer, Michael; Scott, Laura J; Pato, Carlos N; Pato, Michele T; Li, Qingqin S; Kirov, George; Landén, Mikael; Jonsson, Lina; Müller-Myhsok, Bertram; Smoller, Jordan W; Binder, Elisabeth B; Brückl, Tanja M; Czamara, Darina; Van der Auwera, Sandra; Grabe, Hans J; Homuth, Georg; Schmidt, Carsten O; Potash, James B; DePaulo, J Raymond; Goes, Fernando S; MacKinnon, Dean F; Mondimore, Francis M; Weissman, Myrna M; Shi, Jianxin; Frye, Mark A; Biernacka, Joanna M; Reif, Andreas; Witt, Stephanie H; Kahn, René R; Boks, Marco M; Owen, Michael J; Gordon-Smith, Katherine; Mitchell, Brittany L; Martin, Nicholas G; Medland, Sarah E; Jones, Lisa; Knowles, James A; Levinson, Douglas F; O'Donovan, Michael C; Lewis, Cathryn M; Breen, Gerome; Ophoff, Roel A; Bipolar Disorder Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
(2025) The British journal of psychiatry : the journal of mental science, volume 226, issue 2, pp. 79 - 90
(Article)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Accurate diagnosis of bipolar disorder (BPD) is difficult in clinical practice, with an average delay between symptom onset and diagnosis of about 7 years. A depressive episode often precedes the first manic episode, making it difficult to distinguish BPD from unipolar major depressive disorder (MDD). AIMS: We use genome-wide
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association analyses (GWAS) to identify differential genetic factors and to develop predictors based on polygenic risk scores (PRS) that may aid early differential diagnosis. METHOD: Based on individual genotypes from case-control cohorts of BPD and MDD shared through the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium, we compile case-case-control cohorts, applying a careful quality control procedure. In a resulting cohort of 51 149 individuals (15 532 BPD patients, 12 920 MDD patients and 22 697 controls), we perform a variety of GWAS and PRS analyses. RESULTS: Although our GWAS is not well powered to identify genome-wide significant loci, we find significant chip heritability and demonstrate the ability of the resulting PRS to distinguish BPD from MDD, including BPD cases with depressive onset (BPD-D). We replicate our PRS findings in an independent Danish cohort (iPSYCH 2015, N = 25 966). We observe strong genetic correlation between our case-case GWAS and that of case-control BPD. CONCLUSIONS: We find that MDD and BPD, including BPD-D are genetically distinct. Our findings support that controls, MDD and BPD patients primarily lie on a continuum of genetic risk. Future studies with larger and richer samples will likely yield a better understanding of these findings and enable the development of better genetic predictors distinguishing BPD and, importantly, BPD-D from MDD.
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Keywords: Bipolar disorder, early differential diagnosis, genome-wide association analysis, major depressive disorder, polygenic risk scoring, Psychiatry and Mental health, Journal Article
ISSN: 0007-1250
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Note: Publisher Copyright: © 2025 The Author(s).
(Peer reviewed)