Accelerated brain aging predicts impulsivity and symptom severity in depression.

Neuropsychopharmacology

Department of Psychiatry, Weill Cornell Medicine, New York, NY, USA.

Published: April 2021

AI Article Synopsis

  • Neuroimaging studies show that brain structure and function change as we age, and these changes can predict chronological age; deviations from this prediction can indicate accelerated brain aging linked to various mental health risks.
  • In a study comparing healthy adults to those with major depressive disorder (MDD), researchers found that MDD patients exhibited an average brain age that was 2.11 years older than expected, which was associated with higher impulsivity and depressive symptoms in men.
  • The findings suggest that MDD may speed up brain aging processes, and this accelerated aging might also influence the effectiveness of treatment responses in certain contexts, such as in a placebo-controlled trial involving brain stimulation.

Article Abstract

Multiple structural and functional neuroimaging measures vary over the course of the lifespan and can be used to predict chronological age. Accelerated brain aging, as quantified by deviations in the MRI-based predicted age with respect to chronological age, is associated with risk for neurodegenerative conditions, bipolar disorder, and mortality. Whether age-related changes in resting-state functional connectivity are accelerated in major depressive disorder (MDD) is unknown, and, if so, it is unclear if these changes contribute to specific cognitive weaknesses that often occur in MDD. Here, we delineated age-related functional connectivity changes in a large sample of normal control subjects and tested whether brain aging is accelerated in MDD. Furthermore, we tested whether accelerated brain aging predicts individual differences in cognitive function. We trained a support vector regression model predicting age using resting-state functional connectivity in 710 healthy adults aged 18-89. We applied this model trained on normal aging subjects to a sample of actively depressed MDD participants (n = 109). The difference between predicted brain age and chronological age was 2.11 years greater (p = 0.015) in MDD patients compared to control participants. An older MDD brain age was significantly associated with increased impulsivity and, in males, increased depressive severity. Unexpectedly, accelerated brain aging was also associated with increased placebo response in a sham-controlled trial of high-frequency repetitive transcranial magnetic stimulation targeting the dorsomedial prefrontal cortex. Our results indicate that MDD is associated with accelerated brain aging, and that accelerated aging is selectively associated with greater impulsivity and depression severity.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8115107PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41386-021-00967-xDOI Listing

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