Antibodies in the Diagnosis, Prognosis, and Prediction of Psychotic Disorders.pdf (579.56 kB)
Antibodies in the diagnosis, prognosis, and prediction of psychotic disorders
journal contribution
posted on 2023-06-10, 04:58 authored by Thomas A Pollak, Jonathan P Rogers, Robert G Nagele, Mark Peakman, James StoneJames Stone, Anthony S David, Philip McGuireBlood-based biomarker discovery for psychotic disorders has yet to impact upon routine clinical practice. In physical disorders antibodies have established roles as diagnostic, prognostic and predictive (theranostic) biomarkers, particularly in disorders thought to have a substantial autoimmune or infective aetiology. Two approaches to antibody biomarker identification are distinguished: a top-down approach, in which antibodies to specific antigens are sought based on the known function of the antigen and its putative role in the disorder, and emerging bottom-up or omics approaches that are agnostic as to the significance of any one antigen, using high-throughput arrays to identify distinctive components of the antibody repertoire. Here we review the evidence for antibodies (to self-antigens as well as infectious organism and dietary antigens) as biomarkers of diagnosis, prognosis, and treatment response in psychotic disorders. Neuronal autoantibodies have current, and increasing, clinical utility in the diagnosis of organic or atypical psychosis syndromes. Antibodies to selected infectious agents show some promise in predicting cognitive impairment and possibly other symptom domains (eg, suicidality) within psychotic disorders. Finally, infectious antibodies and neuronal and other autoantibodies have recently emerged as potential biomarkers of response to anti-infective therapies, immunotherapies, or other novel therapeutic strategies in psychotic disorders, and have a clear role in stratifying patients for future clinical trials. As in nonpsychiatric disorders, combining biomarkers and large-scale use of bottom-up approaches to biomarker identification are likely to maximize the eventual clinical utility of antibody biomarkers in psychotic disorders.
History
Publication status
- Published
File Version
- Published version
Journal
Schizophrenia BulletinISSN
0586-7614Publisher
Oxford University Press (OUP)External DOI
Issue
1Volume
45Page range
233-246Event location
United StatesDepartment affiliated with
- BSMS Neuroscience Publications
Full text available
- Yes
Peer reviewed?
- Yes