4.7 Article

Trauma Affects Prospective Relationships Between Reward-Related Ventral Striatal and Amygdala Activation and 1-Year Future Hypo/ Mania Trajectories

Journal

BIOLOGICAL PSYCHIATRY
Volume 89, Issue 9, Pages 868-877

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCIENCE INC
DOI: 10.1016/j.biopsych.2020.11.017

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Institute of Mental Health [R01MH100041, R37MH100041]
  2. Pittsburgh Foundation

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This study aimed to investigate how lifetime trauma exposure influences relationships between reward neural circuitry function and the course of future affective and anxiety symptoms. The results showed that trauma exposure affects prospective relationships between markers of reward circuitry function and affective symptom trajectories. Evaluating trauma exposure is crucial in identifying neural predictors of future affective symptom course in naturalistic and treatment studies.
BACKGROUND: Trauma exposure is associated with a more severe, persistent course of affective and anxiety symptoms. Markers of reward neural circuitry function, specifically activation to reward prediction error (RPE), are impacted by trauma and predict the future course of affective symptoms. This study's purpose was to determine how lifetime trauma exposure influences relationships between reward neural circuitry function and the course of future affective and anxiety symptoms in a naturalistic, transdiagnostic observational context. METHODS: A total of 59 young adults aged 18-25 (48 female and 11 male participants, mean +/- SD = 21.5 +/- 2.0 years) experiencing psychological distress completed the study. Participants were evaluated at baseline, 6, and 12 months. At baseline, the participants reported lifetime trauma events and completed a monetary reward functional magnetic resonance imaging task. Affective and anxiety symptoms were reported at each visit, and trajectories were calculated using MPlus. Neural activation during RPE and other phases of reward processing were determined using SPM8. Trauma and reward neural activation were entered as predictors of symptom trajectories. RESULTS: Trauma exposure moderated prospective relationships between left ventral striatum (13 = 21.29, p = .02) and right amygdala (13 = 0.58, p = .04) activation to RPE and future hypo/mania severity trajectory: the interaction between greater trauma and greater left ventral striatum activation to RPE was associated with a shallower increase in hypo/mania severity, whereas the interaction between greater trauma and greater right amygdala activation to RPE was associated with increasing hypo/mania severity. CONCLUSIONS: Trauma exposure affects prospective relationships between markers of reward circuitry function and affective symptom trajectories. Evaluating trauma exposure is thus crucial in naturalistic and treatment studies aiming to identify neural predictors of future affective symptom course.

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