4.6 Article

Longitudinal Trajectory of the Link Between Ventral Striatum and Depression in Adolescence

期刊

AMERICAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHIATRY
卷 179, 期 7, 页码 470-481

出版社

AMER PSYCHIATRIC PUBLISHING, INC
DOI: 10.1176/appi.ajp.20081180

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资金

  1. National Institute of Developmental Psychiatry for Children and Adolescents
  2. Brazilian government agencies FAPESP [2014/50917-0, 2013/08531-5]
  3. CNPq [465550/2014-2]
  4. NIMH Intramural Program [ZIA MH002957-03]
  5. NIMH Intramural Research Program [ZIAMH002798]
  6. European Union-funded FP6 Integrated Project IMAGEN [LSHM-CT- 2007-037286]
  7. Horizon 2020-funded ERC Advanced Grant STRATIFY [695313]
  8. Human Brain Project [785907, 945539]
  9. Medical Research Council Grant c-VEDA [MR/N000390/1]
  10. NIH [R01DA049238]
  11. National Institute for Health Research (NIHR) Biomedical Research Centre at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust and King's College London
  12. Bundesministeriumfur Bildung und Forschung [01GS08152, 01EV0711]
  13. Forschungsnetz AERIAL [01EE1406A, 01EE1406B]
  14. Forschungsnetz IMAC-Mind [01GL1745B]
  15. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [SM 80/7-2, SFB 940, TRR 265, NE 1383/14-1]
  16. Medical Research Foundation and Medical Research Council [MR/R00465X/1, MR/S020306/1]
  17. NIH-funded ENIGMA [5U54EB020403-05, 1R56AG058854-01]
  18. NSFC [82150710554]
  19. environMENTAL grant
  20. Agence Nationale de la Recherche [ANR-12-SAMA-0004, AAPG2019-GeBra]
  21. ERA-NET Neuron [AF12-NEUR0008-01-WM2NA, ANR-18-NEUR00002-01-ADORe]
  22. Fondation de France [00081242]
  23. Fondation pour la Recherche Medicale [DPA20140629802]
  24. Mission Interministerielle de Lutte Contre les Drogues et les Conduites Addictives (MILDECA)
  25. Assistance Publique Hopitaux de Paris and INSERM
  26. Paris Sud University IDEX
  27. Fondation del'Avenir [AP-RM-17-013]
  28. Federation pour la Recherchesur le Cerveau
  29. NIH
  30. Science Foundation Ireland [16/ERCD/3797]
  31. Axon, Testosterone and Mental Health during Adolescence [MH085772-01A1]
  32. NIH Consortium grant [U54 EB020403]
  33. Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR) [ANR-12-SAMA-0004] Funding Source: Agence Nationale de la Recherche (ANR)

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study found associations between right VS connectivity and baseline depressive disorders, and between left VS connectivity and anhedonia at 2 years, as well as between right VS connectivity and anhedonia at 4 years.
Objective: Research in adolescent depression has found aberrant intrinsic functional connectivity (iFC) among the ventral striatum (VS) and several brain regions implicated in reward processing. The present study probes this question by taking advantage of the availability of data from a large youth cohort, the IMAGEN Consortium. Methods: iFC data from 303 adolescents (48% of them female) were used to examine associations of VS connectivity at baseline (at age 14) with depressive disorders at baseline and at 2-year (N=250) and 4-year (N-219) follow-ups. Eleven regions of interest, key nodes of the reward system, were used to probe the reward network and calculate the connectivity strength of the VS within this network (VS connectivity rw ). The main analyses assessed associations of VS connectivity rw with depressive disorders, anhedonia, and tow mood using logistic regression. Autoregressive models accounting for carryover effects over time were conducted to further evaluate these brain-behavior associations. Results: Higher right VS connectivity was associated with higher probability of depressive disorders at baseline (odds ratio=2.65, 95% CI =1.40, 5.05). This finding was confirmed in the autoregressive model, adjusting for carryover effects of the depressive disorders across the three time points. VS connectivity(rw) was not predictive of depressive disorders at follow-up assessments. Longitudinal associations between VS connectivity m and anhedonia emerged in the structural equation model: left VS connectivity(rw) was associated with anhedonia at 2 years (odds ratio= 2.20, 95% CI-1.54, 3.14), and right VS connectivity(rw) was linked to anhedonia at 4 years (odds ratio-1.87, 95% CI=1.09, 3.21). VS connectivity(rw) did not predict low mood at any time point in the structural equation model. Conclusions: The connectivity strength of the VS within the reward network showed distinct patterns of association with depressive disorders and anhedonia from mid to tate adolescence, suggesting that the role of this circuitry in depression changes with age. This study replicates, in an independent sample, the association between the VS and depression previously reported in younger adolescents. The findings suggest a rote of VS connectivity, in anhedonia but not in tow mood.

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