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Towards Precision Medicine in Psychosis: Benefits and Challenges of Multimodal Multicenter Studies-PSYSCAN: Translating Neuroimaging Findings From Research into Clinical Practice.


ABSTRACT: In the last 2 decades, several neuroimaging studies investigated brain abnormalities associated with the early stages of psychosis in the hope that these could aid the prediction of onset and clinical outcome. Despite advancements in the field, neuroimaging has yet to deliver. This is in part explained by the use of univariate analytical techniques, small samples and lack of statistical power, lack of external validation of potential biomarkers, and lack of integration of nonimaging measures (eg, genetic, clinical, cognitive data). PSYSCAN is an international, longitudinal, multicenter study on the early stages of psychosis which uses machine learning techniques to analyze imaging, clinical, cognitive, and biological data with the aim of facilitating the prediction of psychosis onset and outcome. In this article, we provide an overview of the PSYSCAN protocol and we discuss benefits and methodological challenges of large multicenter studies that employ neuroimaging measures.

SUBMITTER: Tognin S 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7043057 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Feb

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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Towards Precision Medicine in Psychosis: Benefits and Challenges of Multimodal Multicenter Studies-PSYSCAN: Translating Neuroimaging Findings From Research into Clinical Practice.

Tognin Stefania S   van Hell Hendrika H HH   Merritt Kate K   Winter-van Rossum Inge I   Bossong Matthijs G MG   Kempton Matthew J MJ   Modinos Gemma G   Fusar-Poli Paolo P   Mechelli Andrea A   Dazzan Paola P   Maat Arija A   de Haan Lieuwe L   Crespo-Facorro Benedicto B   Glenthøj Birte B   Lawrie Stephen M SM   McDonald Colm C   Gruber Oliver O   van Amelsvoort Therese T   Arango Celso C   Kircher Tilo T   Nelson Barnaby B   Galderisi Silvana S   Bressan Rodrigo R   Kwon Jun S JS   Weiser Mark M   Mizrahi Romina R   Sachs Gabriele G   Maatz Anke A   Kahn René R   McGuire Phillip P  

Schizophrenia bulletin 20200201 2


In the last 2 decades, several neuroimaging studies investigated brain abnormalities associated with the early stages of psychosis in the hope that these could aid the prediction of onset and clinical outcome. Despite advancements in the field, neuroimaging has yet to deliver. This is in part explained by the use of univariate analytical techniques, small samples and lack of statistical power, lack of external validation of potential biomarkers, and lack of integration of nonimaging measures (eg  ...[more]

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