The relationship between genetic liability, childhood maltreatment, and IQ: findings from the EU-GEI multicentric case-control study.
Published version
Peer-reviewed
Repository URI
Repository DOI
Type
Change log
Abstract
This study investigated if the association between childhood maltreatment and cognition among psychosis patients and community controls was partially accounted for by genetic liability for psychosis. Patients with first-episode psychosis (N = 755) and unaffected controls (N = 1219) from the EU-GEI study were assessed for childhood maltreatment, intelligence quotient (IQ), family history of psychosis (FH), and polygenic risk score for schizophrenia (SZ-PRS). Controlling for FH and SZ-PRS did not attenuate the association between childhood maltreatment and IQ in cases or controls. Findings suggest that these expressions of genetic liability cannot account for the lower levels of cognition found among adults maltreated in childhood.
Description
Funder: Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation, Instituto de Salud Carlos III (ISCIII)
Funder: European Union, ERDF Funds from the European Commission, “A way of making Europe”
Funder: European Union Structural Funds, European Union Seventh Framework Program, European Union H2020 Program under the Innovative Medicines Initiative 2 Joint Undertaking: Project PRISM-2; Grant(s): 101034377
Funder: Fundación Familia Alonso
Funder: Fundación Alicia Koplowitz; doi: http://dx.doi.org/10.13039/100008062
Journal Title
Conference Name
Journal ISSN
1433-9285
Volume Title
Publisher
Publisher DOI
Rights and licensing
Sponsorship
Medical Research Council Clinical Academic Research Partnership (MR/W030608/1)
Economic and Social Research Council (ESRC) Centre for Society and Mental Health at King’s College London (ES/S012567/1, ES/S012567/1, ES/S012567/1)
European Community’s Seventh Framework Programme, (Project EU-GEI) (HEALTH-F2-2010-241909, HEALTH-F2-2010-241909)
São Paulo Research Foundation (2012/0417-0, 2012/0417-0)
European Union - NextGenerationEU (PMP21/00051, PI19/01024)
CIBERSAM, Madrid Regional Government (B2017/BMD-3740 AGES-CM-2)
Project AIMS-2-TRIALS (777394)
Horizon Europe, the National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health (Project ProNET) (Award Number 1U01MH124639-01)
National Institute of Mental Health of the National Institutes of Health (Project FEP-CAUSAL) (Award Number 5P50MH115846-03)
Netherlands Scientific Organization (VIDI award no. 91.718.336)