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Utilization of Never-Medicated Bipolar Disorder Patients towards Development and Validation of a Peripheral Biomarker Profile

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  • Catherine L Clelland
  • Laura L Read
  • Laura J Panek
  • Robert H Nadrich
  • Carter Bancroft
  • James D Clelland

Abstract

There are currently no biological tests that differentiate patients with bipolar disorder (BPD) from healthy controls. While there is evidence that peripheral gene expression differences between patients and controls can be utilized as biomarkers for psychiatric illness, it is unclear whether current use or residual effects of antipsychotic and mood stabilizer medication drives much of the differential transcription. We therefore tested whether expression changes in first-episode, never-medicated BPD patients, can contribute to a biological classifier that is less influenced by medication and could potentially form a practicable biomarker assay for BPD. We employed microarray technology to measure global leukocyte gene expression in first-episode (n=3) and currently medicated BPD patients (n=26), and matched healthy controls (n=25). Following an initial feature selection of the microarray data, we developed a cross-validated 10-gene model that was able to correctly predict the diagnostic group of the training sample (26 medicated patients and 12 controls), with 89% sensitivity and 75% specificity (p

Suggested Citation

  • Catherine L Clelland & Laura L Read & Laura J Panek & Robert H Nadrich & Carter Bancroft & James D Clelland, 2013. "Utilization of Never-Medicated Bipolar Disorder Patients towards Development and Validation of a Peripheral Biomarker Profile," PLOS ONE, Public Library of Science, vol. 8(6), pages 1-1, June.
  • Handle: RePEc:plo:pone00:0069082
    DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0069082
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