White Matter Abnormalities in Major Depression Biotypes Identified by Diffusion Tensor Imaging
White Matter Abnormalities in Major Depression Biotypes Identified by Diffusion Tensor Imaging作者机构:Mental Health Centre West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu 610041 China Huaxi Brain Research Centre West China Hospital Sichuan University Chengdu 610041 China Language and Genetics Department Max Planck Institute for Psycholinguistics 6525 XD Nijmegen Netherlands Big Data Research Center School of Computer Science and Engineering University of Electronic Science and Technology of China Chengdu 611731 China Department of Psychiatry University of Alberta Edmonton T6G 2B7 Canada
出 版 物:《Neuroscience Bulletin》 (神经科学通报(英文版))
年 卷 期:2019年第35卷第5期
页 面:867-876页
核心收录:
学科分类:10[医学]
基 金:supported by the National Natural Science Foundation of China (81630030, 81130024, 81801326, and 81571320) the National Natural Science Foundation of China/ Research Grants Council of Hong Kong Joint Research Scheme (81461168029) the National Basic Research Development Program of China (2016YFC0904300) the 1.3.5 Project for Disciplines of Excellence, West China Hospital of Sichuan University the National High-Technology Research and Development Project (863 Project) of China (2015AA020513) a Scientific Project of Sichuan Science and Technology Department, China (2015JY0173)
主 题:Major depressive disorder Hierarchal clustering Diffusion tensor imaging Biotype Heterogeneity
摘 要:Identifying data-driven biotypes of major depressive disorder(MDD) has promise for the clarification of diagnostic heterogeneity. However, few studies have focused on white-matter abnormalities for MDD subtyping. This study included 116 patients with MDD and118 demographically-matched healthy controls assessed by diffusion tensor imaging and neurocognitive *** clustering was applied to the major fiber tracts, in conjunction with tract-based spatial statistics, to reveal white-matter alterations associated with *** and neurocognitive differences were compared between identified subgroups and healthy controls. With fractional anisotropy extracted from 20 fiber tracts, cluster analysis revealed 3 subgroups based on the patterns of abnormalities. Patients in each subgroup versus healthy controls showed a stepwise pattern of white-matter alterations as follows: subgroup 1(25.9% of patient sample),widespread white-matter disruption;subgroup 2(43.1% of patient sample), intermediate and more localized abnormalities in aspects of the corpus callosum and left cingulate;and subgroup 3(31.0% of patient sample),possible mild alterations, but no statistically significant tract disruption after controlling for family-wise error. The neurocognitive impairment in each subgroup accompanied the white-matter alterations: subgroup 1, deficits in sustained attention and delayed memory;subgroup 2, dysfunction in delayed memory;and subgroup 3, no significant deficits. Three subtypes of white-matter abnormality exist in individuals with major depression, those having widespread abnormalities suffering more neurocognitive impairments, which may provide evidence for parsing the heterogeneity of the disorder and help optimize typespecific treatment approaches.