4.3 Article

Neuroanatomy of verbal working memory as a diagnostic biomarker for depression

Journal

NEUROREPORT
Volume 19, Issue 15, Pages 1507-1511

Publisher

LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/WNR.0b013e328310425e

Keywords

biomarker; depression; diagnosis; functional magnetic resonance imaging; support vector machine; verbal working memory

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The functional neuroanatomy of verbal working memory is a potential diagnostic biomarker for depression. Twenty patients with unipolar depression and 20 healthy controls performed a variable load version (n-back) of the task. Functional MRI data were analysed with support vector machine methods. Diagnostic classification was highest at the mid-level of task difficulty (2-back) (sensitivity 65%, specificity 70%, P < 0.009). Significant classification of clinical response (>= 50% reduction in clinical symptom ratings) was found at the most difficult level (3-back) (sensitivity 85%, specificity 52%, P < 0.003). The functional neuroanatomy of verbal working memory provides a statistically significant but clinically moderate contribution as a diagnostic biomarker for depression, whereas its potential as a neural predictor of clinical response requires further investigation.

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