TY - JOUR
T1 - Distinct genetic liability profiles define clinically relevant patient strata across common diseases
AU - Schizophrenia Working Group of the Psychiatric Genomics Consortium
AU - Trastulla, Lucia
AU - Dolgalev, Georgii
AU - Moser, Sylvain
AU - Jiménez-Barrón, Laura T.
AU - Andlauer, Till F.M.
AU - von Scheidt, Moritz
AU - Ruderfer, Douglas M.
AU - Ripke, Stephan
AU - McQuillin, Andrew
AU - Stahl, Eli A.
AU - Domenici, Enrico
AU - Adolfsson, Rolf
AU - Agartz, Ingrid
AU - Agerbo, Esben
AU - Albus, Margot
AU - Alexander, Madeline
AU - Amin, Farooq
AU - Bacanu, Silviu A.
AU - Begemann, Martin
AU - Belliveau, Richard A.
AU - Bene, Judit
AU - Bergen, Sarah E.
AU - Bevilacqua, Elizabeth
AU - Bigdeli, Tim B.
AU - Black, Donald W.
AU - Blackwood, Douglas H.R.
AU - Borglum, Anders D.
AU - Bramon, Elvira
AU - Bruggeman, Richard
AU - Buccola, Nancy G.
AU - Buckner, Randy L.
AU - Bulik-Sullivan, Brendan
AU - Buxbaum, Joseph D.
AU - Byerley, William
AU - Cahn, Wiepke
AU - Cai, Guiqing
AU - Campion, Dominique
AU - Cantor, Rita M.
AU - Carr, Vaughan J.
AU - Carrera, Noa
AU - Catts, Stanley V.
AU - Cohen, David
AU - Davis, Kenneth L.
AU - Drapeau, Elodie
AU - Friedman, Joseph I.
AU - Haroutunian, Vahram
AU - Kahn, René S.
AU - Reichenberg, Abraham
AU - Roussos, Panos
AU - Silverman, Jeremy M.
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2024.
PY - 2024/12
Y1 - 2024/12
N2 - Stratified medicine holds great promise to tailor treatment to the needs of individual patients. While genetics holds great potential to aid patient stratification, it remains a major challenge to operationalize complex genetic risk factor profiles to deconstruct clinical heterogeneity. Contemporary approaches to this problem rely on polygenic risk scores (PRS), which provide only limited clinical utility and lack a clear biological foundation. To overcome these limitations, we develop the CASTom-iGEx approach to stratify individuals based on the aggregated impact of their genetic risk factor profiles on tissue specific gene expression levels. The paradigmatic application of this approach to coronary artery disease or schizophrenia patient cohorts identified diverse strata or biotypes. These biotypes are characterized by distinct endophenotype profiles as well as clinical parameters and are fundamentally distinct from PRS based groupings. In stark contrast to the latter, the CASTom-iGEx strategy discovers biologically meaningful and clinically actionable patient subgroups, where complex genetic liabilities are not randomly distributed across individuals but rather converge onto distinct disease relevant biological processes. These results support the notion of different patient biotypes characterized by partially distinct pathomechanisms. Thus, the universally applicable approach presented here has the potential to constitute an important component of future personalized medicine paradigms.
AB - Stratified medicine holds great promise to tailor treatment to the needs of individual patients. While genetics holds great potential to aid patient stratification, it remains a major challenge to operationalize complex genetic risk factor profiles to deconstruct clinical heterogeneity. Contemporary approaches to this problem rely on polygenic risk scores (PRS), which provide only limited clinical utility and lack a clear biological foundation. To overcome these limitations, we develop the CASTom-iGEx approach to stratify individuals based on the aggregated impact of their genetic risk factor profiles on tissue specific gene expression levels. The paradigmatic application of this approach to coronary artery disease or schizophrenia patient cohorts identified diverse strata or biotypes. These biotypes are characterized by distinct endophenotype profiles as well as clinical parameters and are fundamentally distinct from PRS based groupings. In stark contrast to the latter, the CASTom-iGEx strategy discovers biologically meaningful and clinically actionable patient subgroups, where complex genetic liabilities are not randomly distributed across individuals but rather converge onto distinct disease relevant biological processes. These results support the notion of different patient biotypes characterized by partially distinct pathomechanisms. Thus, the universally applicable approach presented here has the potential to constitute an important component of future personalized medicine paradigms.
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85197716640&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1038/s41467-024-49338-2
DO - 10.1038/s41467-024-49338-2
M3 - Article
C2 - 38951512
AN - SCOPUS:85197716640
SN - 2041-1723
VL - 15
JO - Nature Communications
JF - Nature Communications
IS - 1
M1 - 5534
ER -