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The International Consortium on Lithium Genetics (ConLiGen): An Initiative by the NIMH and IGSLI to Study the Genetic Basis of Response to Lithium Treatment
ISSN
0302-282X
Date Issued
2010
Author(s)
Alda, Martin
Adli, Mazda
Akula, Nirmala
Ardau, Raffaella
Bui, Elise T.
Chillotti, Caterina
Cichon, Sven
Czerski, Piotr M.
Del Zompo, Maria
Detera-Wadleigh, Sevilla D.
Grof, Paul
Hashimoto, Ryota
Hauser, Joanna
Hoban, Rebecca
Iwata, Nakao
Kassem, Layla
Kato, Tadafumi
Kittel-Schneider, Sarah
Kliwicki, Sebastian
Kelsoe, John R.
Kusumi, Ichiro
Laje, Gonzalo
Leckband, Susan G.
Manchia, Mirko
MacQueen, Glenda
Masui, Takuya
Ozaki, Norio
Perlis, Roy H.
Pfennig, Andrea
Piccardi, Paola
Richardson, Sara
Rouleau, Guy A.
Reif, Andreas
Rybakowski, Janusz K.
Sasse, Johanna
Severino, Giovanni
Smoller, Jordan W.
Squassina, Alessio
Turecki, Gustavo
Young, L. Trevor
Yoshikawa, Takeo
Bauer, Michael
McMahon, Francis J.
DOI
10.1159/000314708
Abstract
For more than half a decade, lithium has been successfully used to treat bipolar disorder. Worldwide, it is considered the first-line mood stabilizer. Apart from its proven antimanic and prophylactic effects, considerable evidence also suggests an antisuicidal effect in affective disorders. Lithium is also effectively used to augment antidepressant drugs in the treatment of refractory major depressive episodes and prevent relapses in recurrent unipolar depression. In contrast to many psychiatric drugs, lithium has outlasted various pharmacotherapeutic 'fashions', and remains an indispensable element in contemporary psychopharmacology. Nevertheless, data from pharmacogenetic studies of lithium are comparatively sparse, and these studies are generally characterized by small sample sizes and varying definitions of response. Here, we present an international effort to elucidate the genetic underpinnings of lithium response in bipolar disorder. Following an initiative by the International Group for the Study of Lithium-Treated Patients (www.IGSLI.org) and the Unit on the Genetic Basis of Mood and Anxiety Disorders at the National Institute of Mental Health, lithium researchers from around the world have formed the Consortium on Lithium Genetics (www.ConLiGen.org) to establish the largest sample to date for genome-wide studies of lithium response in bipolar disorder, currently comprising more than 1,200 patients characterized for response to lithium treatment. A stringent phenotype definition of response is one of the hallmarks of this collaboration. ConLiGen invites all lithium researchers to join its efforts. Copyright (C) 2010 S. Karger AG, Basel
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