- Fiksinski, Ania M;
- Bearden, Carrie E;
- Bassett, Anne S;
- Kahn, René S;
- Zinkstok, Janneke R;
- Hooper, Stephen R;
- Tempelaar, Wanda;
- McDonald-McGinn, Donna;
- Swillen, Ann;
- Emanuel, Beverly;
- Morrow, Bernice;
- Gur, Raquel;
- Chow, Eva;
- van den Bree, Marianne;
- Vermeesch, Joris;
- Warren, Stephen;
- Owen, Michael;
- van Amelsvoort, Therese;
- Eliez, Stephan;
- Gothelf, Doron;
- Arango, Celso;
- Kates, Wendy;
- Simon, Tony;
- Murphy, Kieran;
- Repetto, Gabriela;
- Suner, Damian Heine;
- Vicari, Stefano;
- Cubells, Joseph;
- Armando, Marco;
- Philip, Nicole;
- Campbell, Linda;
- Garcia-Minaur, Sixto;
- Schneider, Maude;
- Shashi, Vandana;
- Vorstman, Jacob;
- Breetvelt, Elemi J
Certain pathogenic genetic variants impact neurodevelopment and cause deviations from typical cognitive trajectories. Understanding variant-specific cognitive trajectories is clinically important for informed monitoring and identifying patients at risk for comorbid conditions. Here, we demonstrate a variant-specific normative chart for cognitive development for individuals with 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11DS). We used IQ data from 1365 individuals with 22q11DS to construct variant-specific normative charts for cognitive development (Full Scale, Verbal, and Performance IQ). This allowed us to calculate Z-scores for each IQ datapoint. Then, we calculated the change between first and last available IQ assessments (delta Z-IQ-scores) for each individual with longitudinal IQ data (n = 708). We subsequently investigated whether using the variant-specific IQ-Z-scores would decrease required sample size to detect an effect with schizophrenia risk, as compared to standard IQ-scores. The mean Z-IQ-scores for FSIQ, VIQ, and PIQ were close to 0, indicating that participants had IQ-scores as predicted by the normative chart. The mean delta-Z-IQ-scores were equally close to 0, demonstrating a good fit of the normative chart and indicating that, as a group, individuals with 22q11DS show a decline in IQ-scores as they grow into adulthood. Using variant-specific IQ-Z-scores resulted in 30% decrease of required sample size, as compared to the standard IQ-based approach, to detect the association between IQ-decline and schizophrenia (p < 0.01). Our findings suggest that using variant-specific normative IQ data significantly reduces required sample size in a research context, and may facilitate a more clinically informative interpretation of IQ data. This approach allows identification of individuals that deviate from their expected, variant-specific, trajectory. This group may be at increased risk for comorbid conditions, such as schizophrenia in the case of 22q11DS.