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Translating neuroimaging findings into psychiatric practice

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  02 January 2018

Thomas J. Reilly*
Affiliation:
Academic Foundation Programme, University of Glasgow, UK
Philip K. McGuire
Affiliation:
Institute of Psychiatry, King's College London, UK
*
Thomas J. Reilly, University of Glasgow, University Avenue, Glasgow G12 8QQ, UK. Email: [email protected]
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Summary

Although translational medicine has become a priority for medical science, advances in neuroscience have failed to be translated for the benefit of patients. In populations at high risk of psychosis, neuroimaging could stratify those mostly likely to develop psychosis. This is an example of potentially translatable psychiatry.

Type
Editorial
Copyright
Copyright © Royal College of Psychiatrists, 2013 

Since the landmark discoveries of antidepressants, antipsychotics and mood stabilisers midway through the last century, the progress of clinical psychiatry has faltered. Psychiatric diagnosis is still subjective and symptom-based, because the underlying pathophysiology remains largely unknown. Psychiatric treatment, either pharmacological or psychological, is crude compared with more targeted forms of medical therapy. In contrast, basic neuroscience, especially research on processes and systems directly relevant to psychiatry, has flourished. Today, we know far more about the human brain than 50 years ago, yet the practice of psychiatry has changed little: scientific advances have not been translated into clinical practice.

Translational medicine

In theory, the goal of basic medical science is to improve the health of patients. In recent years, the effort to quickly shift scientific discoveries ‘from the bench to the bedside’ has become formalised in translational medicine. This is now a fashionable term; there are new journals, Masters degrees, university departments and governmental initiatives devoted to translational medicine. The thrust of translational research is to gain clinical benefit from discovery, fast. Unfortunately, examples of translational psychiatry are conspicuous by their absence. All the major advances in psychiatric treatment, such as the use of antipsychotic drugs, have been serendipitous rather than hypothesis driven. Nevertheless, there is no good reason why psychiatry cannot exploit advances in neuroscience to inform clinical practice. Neuroimaging is one promising form of basic science which could help translate research findings into benefits for patients with mental illnesses, and is a useful exemplar for translational psychiatry.

Neuroimaging in psychiatry and medicine

In the mid-1970s, computed tomography was used to identify cerebral infarctions for the first time. Reference Paxton and Ambrose1 Around this time the same imaging modality demonstrated that the brains of people with chronic schizophrenia are neuroanatomically different from healthy controls. Reference Johnstone, Crow, Frith, Husband and Kreel2 Today, the management of a patient with suspected stroke would optimally include a battery of imaging investigations such as computed tomography, magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance angiography and transcranial carotid Doppler ultrasound. Despite enormous advances in image acquisition and analysis, neuroimaging still plays almost no role in the clinical management of psychiatric patients. For example, although there are clear group differences between patients with psychiatric disorders and healthy controls, brain scanning does not usually contribute to making a psychiatric diagnosis. The divergence between the clinical application of neuroimaging in psychiatric and neurological disorders is stark. This is in part because brain scans in psychiatric illness are not qualitatively different from normal controls, even though at a group level they are quantitatively. Furthermore, the abnormalities are usually distributed across the brain, rather than limited to a particular focal region. It is thus difficult for a neuroradiologist to recognise a brain scan from a patient with schizophrenia, whereas they would have little difficulty if the patient had been affected by a stroke. Although, by comparing many scans, we can differentiate a group of people with schizophrenia from a group who do not have the disease. The divergence between the use of neuroimaging in psychiatric and medical disorders is also partly due to a failure to translate the science of brain imaging to clinical practice.

Neuroimaging the transition to psychosis

One of the most promising clinical applications of neuroimaging in psychiatry is in predicting the later development of psychosis. The onset of psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia is preceded by a high-risk phase, a clinical syndrome characterised by psychotic symptoms and a decline in overall function. Up to a third of people with this syndrome will develop a psychotic disorder within 2 years. Reference Fusar-Poli, Bonoldi, Yung, Borgwardt, Kempton and Valmaggia3 However, it is impossible to predict which individuals will go on to develop psychosis on clinical grounds. If it were possible to stratify samples at the high-risk stage, the subgroup that are at most risk of developing psychosis could be selectively given treatments that are designed to reduce this risk. Conversely, unnecessary intervention could be avoided in individuals who are destined to recover.

Recent neuroimaging research has revealed that there are many differences between the subgroup of people at high risk who later develop psychosis and the majority who do not. Although these groups are clinically indistinguishable, the structure, function, chemistry and connectivity of their brains are significantly different. At first presentation, individuals who subsequently develop psychosis have less grey matter in the prefrontal, cingulate and temporal cortex, Reference Pantelis, Velakoulis, McGorry, Wood, Suckling and Phillips4,Reference Mechelli, Reicher, Meisenzahl, Tognin, Wood and Borgwardt5 altered function in these regions, Reference Allen, Luigjes, Howes, Egerton, Hirao and Valli6 and elevated subcortical dopamine synthesis capacity. Reference Howes, Bose, Turkheimer, Valli, Egerton and Stahl7 As these individuals make the transition to psychosis, there is a longitudinal progression in baseline abnormalities. Reference Pantelis, Velakoulis, McGorry, Wood, Suckling and Phillips4,Reference Howes, Bose, Turkheimer, Valli, Egerton and Stahl7

Neuroimaging has thus shown that alterations in brain structure, function, chemistry and connectivity pre-date the onset of psychosis. However, if these discoveries are to have more than just academic importance, they must be translated for clinical benefit.

Translating neuroimaging science

A key challenge for translating neuroimaging findings into clinical practice is that research has identified differences between groups of patients but clinical decisions have to be made on the basis of data from an individual. Statistical methods have the potential to overcome this problem. Machine learning is a statistical approach that can be used to estimate the likelihood that a given individual belongs to one clinical group or another; for example, high-risk patients who later develop psychosis, or high-risk patients who will not. Reference Mourao-Miranda, Reinders, Rocha-Rego, Lappin, Rondina and Morgan8 This approach has already been used with some success in predicting the individual risk of transition to psychosis, Reference Koutsouleris, Meisenzahl, Davatzikos, Bottlender, Frodl and Scheuerecker9 and the course of illness after the onset of psychosis. Reference Mourao-Miranda, Reinders, Rocha-Rego, Lappin, Rondina and Morgan8 To date, it has mainly been applied using a single type of imaging data, but its accuracy may be improved by combining data from different imaging modalities, and incorporating neurocognitive and genetic measures in the analysis. Reference Koike, Takano, Iwashiro, Satomura, Suga and Nagai10

In the future, psychiatrists may thus be able to use quantitatively analysed brain scans and other biomarkers as well as their own clinical judgement to stratify patients in terms of clinically meaningful outcomes. This would allow psychiatrists to tailor the form of treatment to the needs of each individual patient.

Delivering on promise

Translational psychiatry requires psychiatrists to operate outwith their comfort zone in embracing research developments. We owe it to our patients to deliver on the promises which modern neuroscience offers. Unravelling the intricacies of the human brain is meaningless if we continue to employ 20th-century clinical practice in the 21st century. The inherent complexity and uncertainty of mental illness make this task more difficult than in other fields of medicine, so it requires a concerted effort from individuals, institutions and governments. Time and money need to be invested to translate basic research into clinical practice, but the reward of transforming the lives of those living with psychiatric disorders makes it well worth the expense.

Footnotes

Declaration of interest

None.

References

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