Schizophrenia: Neuroimaging and Biomarker Challenges in Psychiatric Diagnosis
This review of schizophrenia underscores the absence of reliable laboratory biomarkers for psychiatric diagnosis, with current diagnosis still relying entirely on clinical assessment. Neuroimaging reveals structural changes such as ventricular enlargement and volume reductions, while neurochemical evidence points to dopamine and glutamate pathway dysfunction. The article highlights an unmet need for objective diagnostic biomarkers, including blood-based or imaging markers, that could transform psychiatric diagnostics from subjective assessment to measurable laboratory endpoints.
The original study
Schizophrenia.
- Authors
- Jauhar S, Johnstone M, McKenna PJ
- Journal
- Lancet (London, England)
- Type
- Journal Article, Review
- PMID
- 35093231
Original abstract
Schizophrenia, characterised by psychotic symptoms and in many cases social and occupational decline, remains an aetiological and therapeutic challenge. Contrary to popular belief, the disorder is modestly more common in men than in women. Nor is the outcome uniformly poor. A division of symptoms into positive, negative, and disorganisation syndromes is supported by factor analysis. Catatonic symptoms are not specific to schizophrenia and so-called first rank symptoms are no longer considered diagnostically important. Cognitive impairment is now recognised as a further clinical feature of the disorder. Lateral ventricular enlargement and brain volume reductions of around 2% are established findings. Brain functional changes occur in different subregions of the frontal cortex and might ultimately be understandable in terms of disturbed interaction among large-scale brain networks. Neurochemical disturbance, involving dopamine function and glutamatergic N-methyl-D-aspartate receptor function, is supported by indirect and direct evidence. The genetic contribution to schizophrenia is now recognised to be largely polygenic. Birth and early life factors also have an important aetiological role. The mainstay of treatment remains dopamine receptor-blocking drugs; a psychological intervention, cognitive behavioural therapy, has relatively small effects on symptoms. The idea that schizophrenia is better regarded as the extreme end of a continuum of psychotic symptoms is currently influential. Other areas of debate include cannabis and childhood adversity as causative factors, whether there is progressive brain change after onset, and the long-term success of early intervention initiatives.