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Chronic early-life obesity linked to childhood impulsivity predicts long-term psychosis trajectory through dose-dependent cerebellar dysmaturation in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome

Chronic early-life obesity linked to childhood impulsivity predicts long-term psychosis trajectory through dose-dependent cerebellar dysmaturation in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome
Chronic early-life obesity linked to childhood impulsivity predicts long-term psychosis trajectory through dose-dependent cerebellar dysmaturation in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome
Background: recent epidemiological evidence links early-life obesity and metabolic dysregulation to adult psychosis vulnerability, though a causal relationship remains unclear. Establishing causality in highly heritable psychotic disorders requires: 1) demonstrating that early-life metabolic factors mediate between genetic vulnerability and psychosis trajectory, 2) dissecting mechanisms leading to early-life obesity in genetically vulnerable individuals, and 3) clarifying downstream neurodevelopmental pathways linking early-life obesity to psychosis symptoms.

Methods: here we investigated bidirectional pathways linking behavioral, BMI, and neurodevelopment trajectories in a unique longitudinal cohort of 184 individuals at high genetic risk for psychosis, due to 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome (22q11DS), and 182 neurotypical controls, followed-up since childhood. We combined repeated BMI measurements with clinical/neurocognitive phenotyping and neuroimaging. We investigated the relationship between BMI trajectories with risk of psychosis and tested whether altered cortical or cerebellar development could underlie this association.

Results: childhood behavioral impulsivity predicted early and progressive deviations in BMI trajectories, mediating the effects of 22q11DS vulnerability to early-life obesity. Chronic BMI-increases manifesting during childhood predicted the subsequent emergence of psychosis during late-adolescence/early-adulthood, mediating the effects of behavioral impulsivity. A dose effect relationship linked duration of increased BMI-status to worsening of motor and cognitive disorganization, a key schizophrenia symptom domain, which was mediated by progressive gray matter volume reductions in posterior-inferior cerebellum.

Conclusions: these findings suggest that metabolic dysregulation associated with obesity may link childhood behavioral impulsivity to psychosis vulnerability in 22q11DS, by influencing cerebellar maturation. These findings might support preventive interventions targeting early-life metabolic trajectories in individuals at risk of psychosis.
Schizophrenia; Cerebellum; BMI; Obesity; ADHD; Inflammation
2451-9030
Sandini, Corrado
2a1ae2bb-13d9-4b8d-b0a2-46367ab8ec9c
Reich, Natacha
2d5b1c8b-9d38-4b29-bce7-f3efe5de72f5
Delavari, Farnaz
d919eb7d-f726-415c-9a34-66ca5b1e283b
Pajic, Lara
f25ab2e5-0d57-424f-9595-e27288f0cc40
Escelsior, Andrea
7a26507f-6cf6-4837-9fba-f426b91c6c3f
Forrer, Silas
cea61fd8-0279-48c7-a0e0-bcff3014b203
Imparato, Andrea
905e59ce-b70a-4f85-98a7-bf262fcf9bbf
Kojovic, Nada
70f62e5d-2403-4aea-af94-c4bf73510a8d
Latreche, Caren
70973e47-c08c-42e2-a4b4-8a1c729d98ce
Parlatini, Valeria
6cdfb200-40ce-43ce-84da-dcb6eba0f67a
Cortese, Samuele
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Schneider, Maude
78100b62-ea5c-41d2-afe5-8bc8781625fb
Eliez, Stephan
94d3809e-76fc-4284-86f0-c07420741e92
Sandini, Corrado
2a1ae2bb-13d9-4b8d-b0a2-46367ab8ec9c
Reich, Natacha
2d5b1c8b-9d38-4b29-bce7-f3efe5de72f5
Delavari, Farnaz
d919eb7d-f726-415c-9a34-66ca5b1e283b
Pajic, Lara
f25ab2e5-0d57-424f-9595-e27288f0cc40
Escelsior, Andrea
7a26507f-6cf6-4837-9fba-f426b91c6c3f
Forrer, Silas
cea61fd8-0279-48c7-a0e0-bcff3014b203
Imparato, Andrea
905e59ce-b70a-4f85-98a7-bf262fcf9bbf
Kojovic, Nada
70f62e5d-2403-4aea-af94-c4bf73510a8d
Latreche, Caren
70973e47-c08c-42e2-a4b4-8a1c729d98ce
Parlatini, Valeria
6cdfb200-40ce-43ce-84da-dcb6eba0f67a
Cortese, Samuele
53d4bf2c-4e0e-4c77-9385-218350560fdb
Schneider, Maude
78100b62-ea5c-41d2-afe5-8bc8781625fb
Eliez, Stephan
94d3809e-76fc-4284-86f0-c07420741e92

Sandini, Corrado, Reich, Natacha, Delavari, Farnaz, Pajic, Lara, Escelsior, Andrea, Forrer, Silas, Imparato, Andrea, Kojovic, Nada, Latreche, Caren, Parlatini, Valeria, Cortese, Samuele, Schneider, Maude and Eliez, Stephan (2025) Chronic early-life obesity linked to childhood impulsivity predicts long-term psychosis trajectory through dose-dependent cerebellar dysmaturation in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome. Biological Psychiatry CNNI. (doi:10.1016/j.bpsc.2025.08.014).

Record type: Article

Abstract

Background: recent epidemiological evidence links early-life obesity and metabolic dysregulation to adult psychosis vulnerability, though a causal relationship remains unclear. Establishing causality in highly heritable psychotic disorders requires: 1) demonstrating that early-life metabolic factors mediate between genetic vulnerability and psychosis trajectory, 2) dissecting mechanisms leading to early-life obesity in genetically vulnerable individuals, and 3) clarifying downstream neurodevelopmental pathways linking early-life obesity to psychosis symptoms.

Methods: here we investigated bidirectional pathways linking behavioral, BMI, and neurodevelopment trajectories in a unique longitudinal cohort of 184 individuals at high genetic risk for psychosis, due to 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome (22q11DS), and 182 neurotypical controls, followed-up since childhood. We combined repeated BMI measurements with clinical/neurocognitive phenotyping and neuroimaging. We investigated the relationship between BMI trajectories with risk of psychosis and tested whether altered cortical or cerebellar development could underlie this association.

Results: childhood behavioral impulsivity predicted early and progressive deviations in BMI trajectories, mediating the effects of 22q11DS vulnerability to early-life obesity. Chronic BMI-increases manifesting during childhood predicted the subsequent emergence of psychosis during late-adolescence/early-adulthood, mediating the effects of behavioral impulsivity. A dose effect relationship linked duration of increased BMI-status to worsening of motor and cognitive disorganization, a key schizophrenia symptom domain, which was mediated by progressive gray matter volume reductions in posterior-inferior cerebellum.

Conclusions: these findings suggest that metabolic dysregulation associated with obesity may link childhood behavioral impulsivity to psychosis vulnerability in 22q11DS, by influencing cerebellar maturation. These findings might support preventive interventions targeting early-life metabolic trajectories in individuals at risk of psychosis.

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Accepted/In Press date: 19 August 2025
e-pub ahead of print date: 8 September 2025
Keywords: Schizophrenia; Cerebellum; BMI; Obesity; ADHD; Inflammation

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 505841
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/505841
ISSN: 2451-9030
PURE UUID: 1fe570d9-664e-4212-8f2c-fd7e2f96cb45
ORCID for Valeria Parlatini: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-4754-2494
ORCID for Samuele Cortese: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0001-5877-8075

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Date deposited: 21 Oct 2025 16:44
Last modified: 22 Oct 2025 02:10

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Contributors

Author: Corrado Sandini
Author: Natacha Reich
Author: Farnaz Delavari
Author: Lara Pajic
Author: Andrea Escelsior
Author: Silas Forrer
Author: Andrea Imparato
Author: Nada Kojovic
Author: Caren Latreche
Author: Valeria Parlatini ORCID iD
Author: Samuele Cortese ORCID iD
Author: Maude Schneider
Author: Stephan Eliez

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