Losing control: Prefrontal emotion regulation relates to symptom severity and predicts treatment-related symptom change in adolescent girls with conduct disorder

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Nora Maria Raschle - , University of Zurich, ETH Zurich (Author)
  • Réka Borbás - , University of Zurich (Author)
  • Plamina Dimanova - , University of Zurich, ETH Zurich (Author)
  • Eva Unternaehrer - , University Psychiatric Clinics Basel (UPK) (Author)
  • Gregor Kohls - , Department of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry and Psychotherapy (Author)
  • Stephane De Brito - , University of Birmingham (Author)
  • Graeme Fairchild - , University of Bath (Author)
  • Christine M Freitag - , University Hospital Frankfurt (Author)
  • Kerstin Konrad - , University Hospital Aachen, RWTH Aachen University, Jülich Research Centre (Author)
  • Christina Stadler - , University Psychiatric Clinics Basel (UPK) (Author)

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Emotion regulation skills are linked to corticolimbic brain activity (e.g., dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (dlPFC) and limbic regions) and enable an individual to control their emotional experiences thus allowing healthy social functioning. Disruptions in emotion regulation skills are reported in neuropsychiatric disorders, including conduct disorder or oppositional defiant disorder (CD/ODD). Clinically recognized means to ameliorate emotion regulation deficits observed in CD/ODD include cognitive or dialectical behavioral skills therapy as implemented in the START-NOW program. However, the role of emotion regulation and its neural substrates in symptom severity and prognosis following treatment of adolescent CD/ODD has yet to be investigated.

METHODS: Cross-sectional data including fMRI responses during emotion regulation (N=114; average age=15years), repeated-measures assessments of symptom severity (pre-, post-treatment, long-term follow-up), and fMRI data collected prior to and following the START-NOW randomized controlled trial (n=44) for female adolescents with CD/ODD were analyzed using group comparisons and multiple regression.

RESULTS: First, behavioral and neural correlates of emotion regulation are disrupted in female adolescents with CD/ODD. Second, ODD symptom severity is negatively associated with dlPFC/precentral gyrus activity during regulation. Third, treatment-related symptom changes are predicted by pre-treatment ODD symptom severity and regulatory dlPFC/precentral activity. Additionally, pre-treatment dlPFC/precentral activity and ODD symptom severity predict long-term reductions in symptom severity following treatment for those participants that received the START NOW treatment.

CONCLUSION: Our findings demonstrate the important role that emotion regulation skills play in the characteristics of CD/ODD and show that regulatory dlPFC/precentral activity is positively associated with treatment response in female adolescents with CD/ODD.

Details

Original languageEnglish
JournalBiological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging
Early online date23 Aug 2024
Publication statusPublished - Aug 2024
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

Mendeley 55b4e518-ce08-3ac1-a34a-19f29b3ae530
unpaywall 10.1016/j.bpsc.2024.08.005
ORCID /0000-0003-2408-2939/work/172086076
Scopus 85208711020

Keywords