NeuroImage (Nov 2023)

Data-driven multivariate identification of gyrification patterns in a transdiagnostic patient cohort: A cluster analysis approach

  • Julia-Katharina Pfarr,
  • Tina Meller,
  • Katharina Brosch,
  • Frederike Stein,
  • Florian Thomas-Odenthal,
  • Ulrika Evermann,
  • Adrian Wroblewski,
  • Kai G. Ringwald,
  • Tim Hahn,
  • Susanne Meinert,
  • Alexandra Winter,
  • Katharina Thiel,
  • Kira Flinkenflügel,
  • Andreas Jansen,
  • Axel Krug,
  • Udo Dannlowski,
  • Tilo Kircher,
  • Christian Gaser,
  • Igor Nenadić

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 281
p. 120349

Abstract

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Background: Multivariate data-driven statistical approaches offer the opportunity to study multi-dimensional interdependences between a large set of biological parameters, such as high-dimensional brain imaging data. For gyrification, a putative marker of early neurodevelopment, direct comparisons of patterns among multiple psychiatric disorders and investigations of potential heterogeneity of gyrification within one disorder and a transdiagnostic characterization of neuroanatomical features are lacking. Methods: In this study we used a data-driven, multivariate statistical approach to analyze cortical gyrification in a large cohort of N = 1028 patients with major psychiatric disorders (Major depressive disorder: n = 783, bipolar disorder: n = 129, schizoaffective disorder: n = 44, schizophrenia: n = 72) to identify cluster patterns of gyrification beyond diagnostic categories. Results: Cluster analysis applied on gyrification data of 68 brain regions (DK-40 atlas) identified three clusters showing difference in overall (global) gyrification and minor regional variation (regions). Newly, data-driven subgroups are further discriminative in cognition and transdiagnostic disease risk factors. Conclusions: Results indicate that gyrification is associated with transdiagnostic risk factors rather than diagnostic categories and further imply a more global role of gyrification related to mental health than a disorder specific one. Our findings support previous studies highlighting the importance of association cortices involved in psychopathology. Explorative, data-driven approaches like ours can help to elucidate if the brain imaging data on hand and its a priori applied grouping actually has the potential to find meaningful effects or if previous hypotheses about the phenotype as well as its grouping have to be revisited.

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