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Blood DNA markers and exposure risk scores predict PTSD accurately in military and civilian groups

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Abstract

The exposure and methylation risk score (eMRS) achieved 92% accuracy in classifying individuals with PTSD.

  • The eMRS model demonstrated high precision (91%) and recall (87%) in distinguishing PTSD cases from controls.
  • The methylation-only risk score (MoRS) had a lower accuracy of 89%, while the adjusted methylation score (MoRSAE) showed 84% accuracy.
  • The eMRS significantly predicted PTSD in the BEAR cohort (beta = 0.6839, p = 0.003), but not in three other independent cohorts.
  • All risk score models displayed significant predictive power for post-deployment PTSD based on pre-deployment data (p < 0.001).
  • The findings suggest a connection between methylation and trauma, which may enhance the classification of individuals with PTSD.

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