Serum brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) levels in schizophrenia: A systematic review. 2012

Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
Shanghai Mental Health Center, Shanghai Jiao Tong University School of Medicine, Shanghai, China.

BACKGROUND There is increasing interest in the role of brain-derived neurotrophic factor (BDNF) in the onset and course of schizophrenia, but there are conflicting reports about serum levels of BDNF in patients with schizophrenia. OBJECTIVE Conduct a meta-analysis combining studies from China and other countries that have evaluated the relationship of serum BDNF levels to schizophrenia. METHODS We used Cochrane methodology and RevMan 5.1 software to identify and pool the results of studies. Electronic searches of western and Chinese registries and follow-up assessment of references located 268 potential articles. Twenty-five articles (20 in English and 5 in Chinese) published before December 2011 that used case-control methods, included patients with schizophrenia who had no concurrent disorders, and used ELISA technology to assess serum BDNF were included in the analysis. The main outcome was the pooled standardized mean difference (SMD) between cases and controls. The quality of the studies was independently assessed by two raters using the GRADE system. The heterogeneity, sensitivity and potential publication bias of the studies was evaluated using RevMan. RESULTS The pooled sample included 1663 patients with schizophrenia and 1355 controls. Fifteen of the included studies were rated as 'poor quality' and 10 were rated as 'very poor quality'. The results of the studies were quite heterogenous (I(2)=95%) but subgroup analyses found that the heterogeneity was not related to country of origin, sample size, age, gender, prior use of antipsychotic medication, or study quality. The pooled SMD (computed using a random-effect model because of study heterogeneity) was -0.74 (95% CI, -0.99∼-0.50; Z=5.99, p<0.001). Sensitivity analysis found that the result was stable and there was no evidence of publication bias. CONCLUSIONS Despite the robust statistical findings of lower serum BDNF in patients with schizophrenia than in controls, given the low quality of the available studies and the substantial heterogeneity between studies, the evidence of lower serum BDNF in patients with schizophrenia must be considered 'weak'. The potential use of serum BDNF as a biomarker for schizophrenia must wait until higher-quality prospective studies that follow patients over time and that use uniform selection and monitoring procedures confirm these preliminary results.

UI MeSH Term Description Entries

Related Publications

Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
November 2003, Neuroscience letters,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
August 2016, The Journal of nervous and mental disease,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
September 2011, Molecular psychiatry,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
July 2019, Schizophrenia research,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
January 2024, Brain and behavior,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
April 2014, Archives of psychiatric nursing,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
December 2019, Archivos espanoles de urologia,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
June 2013, Neuroscience letters,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
January 2019, International journal of molecular sciences,
Huiru Cui, and Yi Jin, and Jijun Wang, and Xuchu Weng, and Chunbo Li
January 2016, Annals of general psychiatry,
Copied contents to your clipboard!