Background Current definitions and clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder are major concerns as they obstruct aetiological research and impede drug development. Therefore, stratification of bipolar disorder is a high priority. To inform stratification, our analysis aimed to examine the patterns and relationships between polygenic liability for bipolar disorder, major depressive disorder (MDD), and schizophrenia with multidimensional symptom representations of bipolar disorder. Methods In this analysis, data from the UK Bipolar Disorder Research Network (BDRN) were assessed with the Operational Checklist for Psychotic Disorders. Individuals with bipolar disorder as defined in DSM-IV, of European ancestry (self-reported), aged 18 years or...
Background Recent data provide strong support for a substantial common polygenic contribution (i.e. ...
Objectives: Family and genetic studies indicate overlapping liability for major depressive disorder ...
Importance: Although the usefulness of polygenic risk scores as a measure of genetic liability for m...
Background Current definitions and clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder are major concerns as...
Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and genetic lia...
Abstract Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and ge...
Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and genetic l...
Bipolar disorder (BD) features heterogenous clinical presentation and course of illness. It remains ...
Importance Understanding the origins of clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder (BD) will inform...
Importance: Understanding the origins of clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder (BD) will inform...
Background Psychotic symptoms can be conceptualised as dimensions of psychopathology cutting across...
Bipolar disorder (BD) is highly heterogeneous in symptomatology. Narrowing the clinical phenotype ma...
Background: The value of the nosological distinction between non-affective and affective psychosis h...
Background: Identifying the phenotypic manifestations of increased genetic liability for depression ...
Background Recent data provide strong support for a substantial common polygenic contribution (i.e. ...
Objectives: Family and genetic studies indicate overlapping liability for major depressive disorder ...
Importance: Although the usefulness of polygenic risk scores as a measure of genetic liability for m...
Background Current definitions and clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder are major concerns as...
Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and genetic lia...
Abstract Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and ge...
Importance Bipolar disorder (BD) overlaps schizophrenia in its clinical presentation and genetic l...
Bipolar disorder (BD) features heterogenous clinical presentation and course of illness. It remains ...
Importance Understanding the origins of clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder (BD) will inform...
Importance: Understanding the origins of clinical heterogeneity in bipolar disorder (BD) will inform...
Background Psychotic symptoms can be conceptualised as dimensions of psychopathology cutting across...
Bipolar disorder (BD) is highly heterogeneous in symptomatology. Narrowing the clinical phenotype ma...
Background: The value of the nosological distinction between non-affective and affective psychosis h...
Background: Identifying the phenotypic manifestations of increased genetic liability for depression ...
Background Recent data provide strong support for a substantial common polygenic contribution (i.e. ...
Objectives: Family and genetic studies indicate overlapping liability for major depressive disorder ...
Importance: Although the usefulness of polygenic risk scores as a measure of genetic liability for m...