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CUTHBERT: This study examined five different psychiatric disorders that we’ve always
thought of as distinct disorders. Autism spectrum disorders, attention deficit hyperactivity
disorder, schizophrenia, bipolar disorder and unipolar depression. It examined the genetics
in all of these disorders in one BIG sample, as though they were simply a single illness.
And they found genes that were in common across all of these disorders . In particular, they
found disruptions in calcium channels that are very important parts of neurotransmission.
Now that doesn’t match with the idea that these are distinct. Rather it shows us that
there are these common mechanisms. Now, these may not be involved with absolutely everybody
who has these disorders, but clearly they are present in all of these different groups.
What that suggests is that we can start to move beyond the way we currently think about
disorders. Now we diagnose our disorders purely by description, we describe the symptoms,
and assign a diagnosis on that basis. Now we can start to actually think about diagnosing
the disorder by its underlying biology. That one person has this calcium channel problem.
Another person has something else wrong.
The importance of this is that now we can see our way to looking at better ways to treat
mental disorders. Because rather than looking at a treatment that’s specific to schizophrenia,
or to autism spectrum, we now can look for a problem that may be common across many people,
like fixing these calcium channel problems, and that would be a therapy that would help
a great many people, depending on their disease biology and not the particular symptoms that
they have.