Structural brain networks in remitted psychotic depression.
Nicholas H NeufeldAntonia N KaczkurkinAristeidis SotirasBenoit H MulsantErin W DickieAlastair J FlintBarnett S MeyersGeorge S AlexopoulosAnthony J RothschildEllen M WhyteLinda MahJay NierenbergMatthew J HoptmanChristos DavatzikosTheodore Daniel SatterthwaiteAristotle N VoineskosPublished in: Neuropsychopharmacology : official publication of the American College of Neuropsychopharmacology (2020)
Major depressive disorder with psychotic features (psychotic depression) is a severe disorder. Compared with other psychotic disorders such as schizophrenia, relatively few studies on the neurobiology of psychotic depression have been pursued. Neuroimaging studies investigating psychotic depression have provided evidence for distributed structural brain abnormalities implicating the insular cortex and limbic system. We examined structural brain networks in participants (N = 245) using magnetic resonance imaging. This sample included healthy controls (n = 159) and the largest cross-sectional sample of patients with remitted psychotic depression (n = 86) collected to date. All patients participated in the Study of Pharmacotherapy of Psychotic Depression II randomized controlled trial. We used a novel, whole-brain, data-driven parcellation technique-non-negative matrix factorization-and applied it to cortical thickness data to derive structural covariance networks. We compared patients with remitted psychotic depression to healthy controls and found that patients had significantly thinner cortex in five structural covariance networks (insular-limbic, occipito-temporal, temporal, parahippocampal-limbic, and inferior fronto-temporal), confirming our hypothesis that affected brain networks would incorporate cortico-limbic regions. We also found that cross-sectional depression and severity scores at the time of scanning were associated with the insular-limbic network. Furthermore, the insular-limbic network predicted future severity scores that were collected at the time of recurrence of psychotic depression or sustained remission. Overall, decreased cortical thickness was found in five structural brain networks in patients with remitted psychotic depression and brain-behavior relationships were observed, particularly between the insular-limbic network and illness severity.
Keyphrases
- bipolar disorder
- major depressive disorder
- depressive symptoms
- resting state
- sleep quality
- randomized controlled trial
- magnetic resonance imaging
- white matter
- cross sectional
- functional connectivity
- end stage renal disease
- ejection fraction
- newly diagnosed
- optical coherence tomography
- rheumatoid arthritis
- high resolution
- cerebral ischemia
- machine learning
- physical activity
- study protocol
- systemic lupus erythematosus
- artificial intelligence
- peritoneal dialysis