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Saturday, June 30, 2018
Link between autoimmune disorders and psychosis confirmed in new study
TheConversation: People with autoimmune disorders, a collection of diseases where
the body’s immune system attacks its own cells, are more likely to have
psychosis, according to our latest research. Previous research found that rates of rheumatoid arthritis were lower
in people with psychosis than would be expected in the general
population. But later studies showed that other autoimmune disorders,
such as coeliac disease and autoimmune thyroid disorders,
were more common in people with psychosis. This led scientists to the
view that there is a connection between autoimmune disorders and
psychosis. But conflicting findings meant that it was difficult to reach
any conclusions about the relationship.
Given the uncertainty about the relationship between these disorders
and psychosis, and growing interest in this area, we decided to review
the research and conduct a meta-analysis – a method in which data from
several studies are combined and analysed together to give a more
statistically robust result than individual studies can provide.
Our study, which is published in Biological Psychiatry, included 30 relevant studies, and contained data on 25m people.
What we found
We focused on autoimmune disorders that affect the peripheral system,
such as type 1 diabetes, as we were particularly interested in whether
autoimmune disorders that target the body, as opposed to the brain,
could still influence the development of psychosis.
For our main analysis, we combined data from all non-neurological
autoimmune disorders, except for rheumatoid arthritis (given the
well-established negative association reported with psychosis) and found
that, overall, people with any autoimmune disorder were 40% more likely
to have a psychotic disorder, such as schizophrenia.
For our secondary analysis, we examined individual autoimmune
disorders. We found the likelihood of having psychosis was higher for pernicious anaemia, pemphigoid (a disease characterised by skin blisters), psoriasis, coeliac disease and Graves’ disease (the disease suffered by Marty Feldman that causes protrusion of the eyeballs). But it was lower for rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis (a type of arthritis that mainly affects the spine), suggesting that these disorders are protective.
Looking for causes
There are a range of possible mechanisms that might underlie the
relationships we found. Given that people with psychosis have also been
found to show higher levels of inflammatory markers
in the blood than healthy people, and that inflammation is a core
feature of autoimmune disorders, inflammation is a likely candidate.
But rheumatoid arthritis and ankylosing spondylitis are also
characterised by higher levels of inflammation, so this would not
explain the negative relationships we found with these disorders.
Although all autoimmune disorders activate the body’s immune system, the
exact response differs depending on the disorder. This might go some
way to explaining why we found different relationships for individual
autoimmune disorders, and suggests that inflammation cannot be the only
mechanism.
It is possible that there might be a genetic link between autoimmune disorders and psychosis. In fact, research has recently shown
that variations within specific genes are associated with both
schizophrenia and rheumatoid arthritis. That is, people with one
variation of the gene are at risk for schizophrenia, while people with
the other variation are at risk for rheumatoid arthritis. This might
explain why rheumatoid arthritis appears to be protective for psychosis.
Newly discovered antibodies (part of the immune system’s armoury) that go rogue and mistakenly attack brain cells might also explain the link. These sorts of antibodies are thought to cause psychotic symptoms, such as paranoia and hallucinations, in some people. Lid retraction is a typical symptoms of Graves’ disease.Jonathan Trobe/Wikimedia Commons, CC BY
Although our study cannot tell us why autoimmune disorders and
psychosis occur together more commonly than we would expect, it provides
stronger evidence that a relationship does exist.
Our group is involved in further research to help us better
understand the mechanisms that might underlie this complex relationship.
Early intervention
So what is the real-world application of these findings? Although the
risk of psychosis is only slightly increased for people with autoimmune
disorders, our findings suggest that perhaps doctors ought to monitor
people with certain autoimmune disorders for early signs of psychosis –
especially pernicious anaemia, Graves’ disease and pemphigoid, which
showed the most consistent relationships with psychosis. This is
important because early intervention has been shown to improve long-term outcomes for people in the initial stages of a psychotic disorder.