Journal of Neurodevelopmental Disorders (Feb 2023)

Deep phenotypic analysis of psychiatric features in genetically defined cohorts: application to XYY syndrome

  • Armin Raznahan,
  • Srishti Rau,
  • Luke Schaffer,
  • Siyuan Liu,
  • Ari M. Fish,
  • Catherine Mankiw,
  • Anastasia Xenophontos,
  • Liv S. Clasen,
  • Lisa Joseph,
  • Audrey Thurm,
  • Jonathan D. Blumenthal,
  • Dani S. Bassett,
  • Erin N. Torres

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s11689-023-09476-y
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 15, no. 1
pp. 1 – 16

Abstract

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Abstract Background Recurrent gene dosage disorders impart substantial risk for psychopathology. Yet, understanding that risk is hampered by complex presentations that challenge classical diagnostic systems. Here, we present a suite of generalizable analytic approaches for parsing this clinical complexity, which we illustrate through application to XYY syndrome. Method We gathered high-dimensional measures of psychopathology in 64 XYY individuals and 60 XY controls, plus additional interviewer-based diagnostic data in the XYY group. We provide the first comprehensive diagnostic description of psychiatric morbidity in XYY syndrome and show how diagnostic morbidity relates to functioning, subthreshold symptoms, and ascertainment bias. We then map behavioral vulnerabilities and resilience across 67 behavioral dimensions before borrowing techniques from network science to resolve the mesoscale architecture of these dimensions and links to observable functional outcomes. Results Carriage of an extra Y-chromosome increases risk for diverse psychiatric diagnoses, with clinically impactful subthreshold symptomatology. Highest rates are seen for neurodevelopmental and affective disorders. A lower bound of < 25% of carriers are free of any diagnosis. Dimensional analysis of 67 scales details the profile of psychopathology in XYY, which survives control for ascertainment bias, specifies attentional and social domains as the most impacted, and refutes stigmatizing historical associations between XYY and violence. Network modeling compresses all measured symptom scales into 8 modules with dissociable links to cognitive ability, adaptive function, and caregiver strain. Hub modules offer efficient proxies for the full symptom network. Conclusions This study parses the complex behavioral phenotype of XYY syndrome by applying new and generalizable analytic approaches for analysis of deep-phenotypic psychiatric data in neurogenetic disorders.

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