- Hettwer, MD;
- Larivière, S;
- Park, BY;
- van den Heuvel, OA;
- Schmaal, L;
- Andreassen, OA;
- Ching, CRK;
- Hoogman, M;
- Buitelaar, J;
- van Rooij, D;
- Veltman, DJ;
- Stein, DJ;
- Franke, B;
- van Erp, TGM;
- Jahanshad, N;
- Thompson, PM;
- Thomopoulos, SI;
- Bethlehem, RAI;
- Bernhardt, BC;
- Eickhoff, SB;
- Valk, SL
Neuropsychiatric disorders are increasingly conceptualized as overlapping spectra sharing multi-level neurobiological alterations. However, whether transdiagnostic cortical alterations covary in a biologically meaningful way is currently unknown. Here, we studied co-alteration networks across six neurodevelopmental and psychiatric disorders, reflecting pathological structural covariance. In 12,024 patients and 18,969 controls from the ENIGMA consortium, we observed that co-alteration patterns followed normative connectome organization and were anchored to prefrontal and temporal disease epicenters. Manifold learning revealed frontal-to-temporal and sensory/limbic-to-occipitoparietal transdiagnostic gradients, differentiating shared illness effects on cortical thickness along these axes. The principal gradient aligned with a normative cortical thickness covariance gradient and established a transcriptomic link to cortico-cerebello-thalamic circuits. Moreover, transdiagnostic gradients segregated functional networks involved in basic sensory, attentional/perceptual, and domain-general cognitive processes, and distinguished between regional cytoarchitectonic profiles. Together, our findings indicate that shared illness effects occur in a synchronized fashion and along multiple levels of hierarchical cortical organization.