White matter fiber microstructure is associated with prior hospitalizations rather than acute symptomatology in major depressive disorder

Research output: Contribution to journalResearch articleContributedpeer-review

Contributors

  • Susanne Meinert - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Elisabeth J. Leehr - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Dominik Grotegerd - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Jonathan Repple - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Katharina Förster - , Chair of Clinical Psychology an Behavioral Neuroscience, University of Münster (Author)
  • Nils R. Winter - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Verena Enneking - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Stella M. Fingas - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Hannah Lemke - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Lena Waltemate - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Frederike Stein - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Katharina Brosch - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Simon Schmitt - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Tina Meller - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Anna Linge - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Axel Krug - , University of Marburg, University of Bonn (Author)
  • Igor Nenadić - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Andreas Jansen - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Tim Hahn - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Ronny Redlich - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Nils Opel - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Ricarda I. Schubotz - , University of Münster (Author)
  • Bernhard T. Baune - , University of Münster, University of Melbourne (Author)
  • Tilo Kircher - , University of Marburg (Author)
  • Udo Dannlowski - , University of Münster (Author)

Abstract

Background: Eighty percent of all patients suffering from major depressive disorder (MDD) relapse at least once in their lifetime. Thus, understanding the neurobiological underpinnings of the course of MDD is of utmost importance. A detrimental course of illness in MDD was most consistently associated with superior longitudinal fasciculus (SLF) fiber integrity. As similar associations were, however, found between SLF fiber integrity and acute symptomatology, this study attempts to disentangle associations attributed to current depression from long-term course of illness. 

Methods: A total of 531 patients suffering from acute (N = 250) or remitted (N = 281) MDD from the FOR2107-cohort were analyzed in this cross-sectional study using tract-based spatial statistics for diffusion tensor imaging. First, the effects of disease state (acute v. remitted), current symptom severity (BDI-score) and course of illness (number of hospitalizations) on fractional anisotropy (FA), mean diffusivity (MD), radial diffusivity (RD), and axial diffusivity were analyzed separately. Second, disease state and BDI-scores were analyzed in conjunction with the number of hospitalizations to disentangle their effects.

Results: Disease state (pFWE < 0.042) and number of hospitalizations (pFWE< 0.032) were associated with decreased FA and increased MD and RD in the bilateral SLF. A trend was found for the BDI-score (pFWE > 0.067). When analyzed simultaneously only the effect of course of illness remained significant (pFWE < 0.040) mapping to the right SLF.

Conclusions: Decreased FA and increased MD and RD values in the SLF are associated with more hospitalizations when controlling for current psychopathology. SLF fiber integrity could reflect cumulative illness burden at a neurobiological level and should be targeted in future longitudinal analyses.

Details

Original languageEnglish
Article number0033291720002950
Pages (from-to)1166-1174
Number of pages9
JournalPsychological medicine
Volume52
Issue number6
Early online dateSept 2020
Publication statusPublished - Apr 2022
Peer-reviewedYes

External IDs

PubMed 32921338
WOS 000849361300019

Keywords

Sustainable Development Goals

Keywords

  • Acute symptomatology, course of illness, diffusion tensor imaging, hospitalization, major depressive disorder, remitted, superior longitudinal fasciculus, CHILDHOOD MALTREATMENT, POPULATION, ABNORMALITIES, PROCESSING SPEED, IMPAIRMENT, INTEGRITY, RECURRENCE, NETHERLANDS, BRAIN, SEVERITY

Library keywords