Exploring the genetics of lithium response in bipolar disorders.

Author

Herrera-Rivero, Marisol

Adli, Mazda

Akiyama, Kazufumi

Akula, Nirmala

Amare, Azmeraw T.

Ardau, Raffaella

Arias, Bárbara

Aubry, Jean-Michel

Backlund, Lena

Bellivier, Frank

Benabarre, Antonio

Bengesser, Susanne

Bhattacharjee, Abesh Kumar

Biernacka, Joanna M.

Birner, Armin

Cearns, Micah

Cervantes, Pablo

Chen, Hsi-Chung

Chillotti, Caterina

Cichon, Sven

Clark, Scott R.

Colom, Francesc

Cruceanu, Cristiana

Czerski, Piotr M.

Dalkner, Nina

Degenhardt, Franziska

Zompo, Maria del

DePaulo, J. Raymond

Etain, Bruno

Falkai, Peter

Ferensztajn-Rochowiak, Ewa

Forstner, Andreas J.

Frank, Josef

Frisén, Louise

Frye, Mark A.

Fullerton, Janice M.

Gallo, Carla

Gard, Sébastien

Garnham, Julie S.

Goes, Fernando S.

Grigoroiu-Serbanescu, Maria

Gro, Paul

Hashimoto, Ryota

Hasler, Roland

Hauser, Joanna

Heilbronner, Urs

Herms, Stefan

Hoffmann, Per

Hou, Liping

Hsu, Yi-Hsiang

Jamain, Stephane

Jimenez, Esther

Kahn, Jean-Pierre

Kassem, Layla

Kato, Tadafumi

Kelsoe, John

Kittel-Schneider, Sarah

Kuo, Po-Hsiu

Kusumi, Ichiro

König, Barbara

Laje, Gonzalo

Landén, Mikael

Lavebratt, Catharina

Leboyer, Marion

Leckband, Susan G.

Maj, Mario

Manchia, Mirko

Marie-Claire, Cynthia

Martinsson, Lina

McCarthy, Michael J.

McElroy, Susan L.

Millischer, Vincent

Mitjans Niubó, Marina

Mondimore, Francis M.

Monteleone, Palmiero

Nievergelt, Caroline M.

Novák, Tomas

Nöthen, Markus M.

O'Donovan, Claire

Ozaki, Norio

Papiol, Sergi

Pfennig, Andrea

Pisanu, Claudia

Potash, James B.

Reif, Andreas

Reininghaus, Eva

Richard-Lepouriel, Hélène

Roberts, Gloria

Rouleau, Guy A.

Rybakowski, Janusz K.

Schalling, Martin

Schofield, Peter R.

Schubert, Klaus Oliver

Schulte, Eva C.

Schweizer, Barbara W.

Severino, Giovanni

Shekhtman, Tatyana

Shilling, Paul D.

Shimoda, Katzutaka

Simhandl, Christian

Slaney, Claire M.

Squassina, Alessio

Stamm, Thomas

Stopkova, Pavla

Streit, Fabian

Tekola-Ayele, Fasil

Thalamuthu, Anbupalam

Tortorella, Alfonso

Turecki, Gustavo

Veeh, Julia

Vieta i Pascual, Eduard, 1963-

Viswanath, Biju

Witt, Stephanie H.

Zandi, Peter P.

Alda, Martin

Bauer, Michael

McMahon, Francis J.

Mitchell, Philip B.

Rietschel, Marcella

Schulze, Thomas G.

Baune, Bernhard T.

Publication date

2025-12-23T10:54:28Z

2025-12-23T10:54:28Z

2024-06-12

2025-12-23T10:54:28Z

Abstract

Background: Lithium (Li) remains the treatment of choice for bipolar disorders (BP). Its mood-stabilizing effects help reduce the long-term burden of mania, depression and suicide risk in patients with BP. It also has been shown to have beneficial effects on disease-associated conditions, including sleep and cardiovascular disorders. However, the individual responses to Li treatment vary within and between diagnostic subtypes of BP (e.g. BP-I and BP-II) according to the clinical presentation. Moreover, long-term Li treatment has been linked to adverse side-effects that are a cause of concern and non-adherence, including the risk of developing chronic medical conditions such as thyroid and renal disease. In recent years, studies by the Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen) have uncovered a number of genetic factors that contribute to the variability in Li treatment response in patients with BP. Here, we leveraged the ConLiGen cohort (N = 2064) to investigate the genetic basis of Li effects in BP. For this, we studied how Li response and linked genes associate with the psychiatric symptoms and polygenic load for medical comorbidities, placing particular emphasis on identifying differences between BP-I and BP-II. Results: We found that clinical response to Li treatment, measured with the Alda scale, was associated with a diminished burden of mania, depression, substance and alcohol abuse, psychosis and suicidal ideation in patients with BP-I and, in patients with BP-II, of depression only. Our genetic analyses showed that a stronger clinical response to Li was modestly related to lower polygenic load for diabetes and hypertension in BP-I but not BP-II. Moreover, our results suggested that a number of genes that have been previously linked to Li response variability in BP differentially relate to the psychiatric symptomatology, particularly to the numbers of manic and depressive episodes, and to the polygenic load for comorbid conditions, including diabetes, hypertension and hypothyroidism. Conclusions: Taken together, our findings suggest that the effects of Li on symptomatology and comorbidity in BP are partially modulated by common genetic factors, with differential effects between BP-I and BP-II.

Document Type

Article


Published version

Language

English

Publisher

Springer Open

Related items

Reproducció del document publicat a: https://doi.org/10.1186/s40345-024-00341-y

International Journal of Bipolar Disorders, 2024, vol. 12, num.1

https://doi.org/10.1186/s40345-024-00341-y

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Rights

cc-by (c) Herrera-Rivero M et al., 2024

http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/