Could a parasite many people carry be a hidden trigger for schizophrenia? Researchers looked at this question by comparing men diagnosed with paranoid schizophrenia to healthy men. They tested for antibodies to Toxoplasma gondii—a common parasite often spread by cats—and checked for a specific variation in a gene involved in the immune system. The study found that the men with schizophrenia were no more likely to have the parasite than the healthy men. The immune system gene variation also showed no link to the illness, and there was no sign that the two factors combined to increase risk. This is a clear 'null' result, meaning the study found no evidence for a connection. The findings caution against interpreting a positive test for this parasite in an adult as a biomarker for psychosis risk. The researchers note that future studies should look at whether the timing of infection—like during brain development—might matter more than simply having it as an adult.
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Does a common parasite increase schizophrenia risk in men? New study finds no link.
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What this means for you:
No evidence found linking a common parasite to schizophrenia risk in adult men. What this means for you:
No evidence found linking a common parasite to schizophrenia risk in adult men. View Original Abstract ↓
Background and HypothesisToxoplasma gondii (TG) exposure and host immunogenetic variation have been implicated in psychosis. Interferon-gamma (IFN-γ) is central to TG control; the IFN-γ +874T/A polymorphism has been linked to variability in IFN-γ production. We hypothesized that TG seropositivity and IFN-γ +874T/A jointly increase risk for paranoid schizophrenia in males.Study designWe conducted a case–control study of adult males (103 cases meeting DSM-IV criteria for paranoid schizophrenia; 102 healthy controls) from two mental health centers in Israel. TG status was assessed serologically using automated ELFA/VIDAS assays. IFN-γ +874T/A was genotyped with Applied Biosystems TaqMan assays. Logistic regression modeled case status as a function of TG serostatus, genotype (AA/TA/TT), their interaction, and age. Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium (HWE) was tested among controls. Sensitivity analyses explored dominant, recessive, and additive genetic encodings.Study resultsTG seropositivity rates were nearly identical in cases and controls. Genotype distributions among controls conformed to HWE. In the primary model, TG serostatus was not associated with case status, and no TG×genotype interaction was detected. Findings were consistent across sensitivity analyses.ConclusionsIn this male paranoid-schizophrenia cohort, we found no evidence that TG serostatus, IFN-γ +874T/A, or their interaction contribute to disease risk. The near-identical TG+ prevalence across groups argues against large interaction effects under the exposure and measurement definitions used here. Transparent null results refine plausible effect sizes and caution against overinterpreting adult TG seropositivity as a biomarker of psychosis risk. Future studies should target developmental timing and immune-functional markers before infection-related screening or prevention can be justified.