A genome-wide association meta-analysis of prognostic outcomes following cognitive behavioural therapy in individuals with anxiety and depressive disorders

Open Access
Authors
  • C. Rayner
  • J.R.I. Coleman
  • K.L. Purves
  • J. Hodsoll
  • K. Goldsmith
  • G.W. Alpers
  • E. Andersson
  • V. Arolt
  • J. Boberg
  • S. Bögels
  • C. Creswell
  • P. Cooper
  • C. Curtis
  • J. Deckert
  • K. Domschke
  • S. El Alaoui
  • L. Fehm
  • T. Fydrich
  • A.L. Gerlach
  • A. Grocholewski
  • K. Hahlweg
  • A. Hamm
  • E. Hedman
  • E.R. Heiervang
  • J.L. Hudson
  • P. Jöhren
  • R. Keers
  • T. Kircher
  • T. Lang
  • C. Lavebratt
  • S. Lee
  • K.J. Lester
  • N. Lindefors
  • J. Margraf
  • M. Nauta
  • C.A. Pané-Farré
  • P. Pauli
  • R.M. Rapee
  • A. Reif
  • W. Rief
  • S. Roberts
  • M. Schalling
  • S. Schneider
  • W.K. Silverman
  • A. Ströhle
  • T. Teismann
  • M. Thastum
  • A. Wannemüller
  • H. Weber
  • H. Wittchen
  • C. Wolf
  • C. Rück
  • G. Breen
  • T.C. Eley
Publication date 23-05-2019
Journal Translational Psychiatry
Article number 150
Volume | Issue number 9
Number of pages 13
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Research Institute of Child Development and Education (RICDE)
Abstract

Major depressive disorder and the anxiety disorders are highly prevalent, disabling and moderately heritable. Depression and anxiety are also highly comorbid and have a strong genetic correlation (rg ≈ 1). Cognitive behavioural therapy is a leading evidence-based treatment but has variable outcomes. Currently, there are no strong predictors of outcome. Therapygenetics research aims to identify genetic predictors of prognosis following therapy. We performed genome-wide association meta-analyses of symptoms following cognitive behavioural therapy in adults with anxiety disorders (n = 972), adults with major depressive disorder (n = 832) and children with anxiety disorders (n = 920; meta-analysis n = 2724). We estimated the variance in therapy outcomes that could be explained by common genetic variants (h2SNP) and polygenic scoring was used to examine genetic associations between therapy outcomes and psychopathology, personality and learning. No single nucleotide polymorphisms were strongly associated with treatment outcomes. No significant estimate of h2SNP could be obtained, suggesting the heritability of therapy outcome is smaller than our analysis was powered to detect. Polygenic scoring failed to detect genetic overlap between therapy outcome and psychopathology, personality or learning. This study is the largest therapygenetics study to date. Results are consistent with previous, similarly powered genome-wide association studies of complex traits.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1038/s41398-019-0481-y
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s41398-019-0481-y (Final published version)
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