Intrinsic connectomes underlying response to trauma-focused psychotherapy in post-traumatic stress disorder

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作者
Mayuresh S. Korgaonkar
Cassandra Chakouch
Isabella A. Breukelaar
May Erlinger
Kim L. Felmingham
David Forbes
Leanne M. Williams
Richard A. Bryant
机构
[1] Brain Dynamics Centre,Department of Psychiatry
[2] Westmead Institute for Medical Research,School of Psychology
[3] The University of Sydney,School of Psychological Sciences
[4] Faculty of Medicine and Health,Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences
[5] University of Sydney,undefined
[6] University of New South Wales,undefined
[7] University of Melbourne,undefined
[8] Centenary of ANZAC Centre,undefined
[9] a Department of Veterans’ Affairs funded initiative of Phoenix Australia,undefined
[10] Stanford University,undefined
[11] Sierra-Pacific Mental Illness Research,undefined
[12] Education,undefined
[13] and Clinical Center (MIRECC) VA Palo Alto Health Care System,undefined
来源
Translational Psychiatry | / 10卷
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摘要
Although trauma-focused cognitive behavior therapy (TF-CBT) is the frontline treatment for post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), up to one-half of patients are treatment nonresponders. To understand treatment nonresponse, it is important to understand the neural mechanisms of TF-CBT. Here, we used whole-brain intrinsic functional connectivity analysis to identify neural connectomic signatures of treatment outcome. In total, 36 PTSD patients and 36 healthy individuals underwent functional MRI at pre-treatment baseline. Patients then underwent nine sessions of TF-CBT and completed clinical and follow-up MRIs. We used an established large-scale brain network atlas to parcellate the brain into 343 brain regions. Pairwise intrinsic task-free functional connectivity was calculated and used to identify pre-treatment connectomic features that were correlated with reduction of PTSD severity from pretreatment to post treatment. We formed a composite metric of intrinsic connections associated with therapeutic outcome, and then interrogated this composite metric to determine if it distinguished PTSD treatment responders and nonresponders from healthy control status and changed post treatment. Lower pre-treatment connectivity for the cingulo-opercular, salience, default mode, dorsal attention, and frontoparietal executive control brain networks was associated with treatment improvement. Treatment responders had lower while nonresponders had significantly greater connectivity than controls at pretreatment. With therapy, connectivity significantly increased for responders and decreased for nonresponders, while controls remain unchanged over this time period. We provide evidence that the intrinsic functional architecture of the brain, specifically connectivity within and between brain networks associated with external vigilance, self-awareness, and cognitive control, may characterize a positive response to TF-CBT for PTSD.
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