Altered resting-state functional connectome in major depressive disorder: a mega-analysis from the PsyMRI consortium

Oct 8, 2021Translational psychiatry

Changes in brain network activity at rest in major depression: a large combined analysis

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Abstract

The study analyzed in a final sample of 606 patients with major depressive disorder (MDD) and 476 healthy participants.

  • MDD patients exhibited significant hypoconnectivity within somatosensory motor and salience networks compared to healthy participants.
  • Altered connectivity was also found between somatosensory motor, salience, dorsal attention, and visual networks in MDD patients.
  • No significant differences in connectivity were detected within the default mode and frontoparietal networks.
  • MDD patients showed lower in the somatosensory motor network.
  • Medicated MDD patients had significantly lower functional connectivity within the default mode, frontoparietal, and salience networks compared to unmedicated patients.
  • There were no differences in network organization of the somatosensory motor network between medicated and unmedicated groups.

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Key numbers

606
Participants with MDD
Total number of MDD patients included in the analysis.
476
Participants in the control group
Total number of healthy participants included for comparison.
3.707
Lower SMN segregation
Statistical result indicating significantly lower segregation in MDD patients compared to controls.

Full Text

What this is

  • This research investigates alterations in major depressive disorder (MDD) using a large dataset from the PsyMRI consortium.
  • The analysis includes 606 MDD patients and 476 healthy participants, focusing on resting-state functional MRI data.
  • Key findings reveal hypoconnectivity in somatosensory motor and salience networks, suggesting these may serve as stable neuroimaging markers for MDD.

Essence

  • MDD patients show significant hypoconnectivity within somatosensory motor and salience networks compared to healthy controls. Network organization, particularly in the somatosensory motor network, is also altered, indicating potential markers for MDD severity.

Key takeaways

  • MDD patients exhibit lower () within the somatosensory motor network (SMN) and salience network (SN) compared to healthy controls. The mean within SMN is significantly reduced, which may indicate impaired sensory processing in MDD.
  • of the SMN is significantly lower in MDD patients, suggesting a disruption in the organization of brain networks crucial for sensory information processing. This finding may reflect a more stable neuroimaging marker for MDD.
  • The study found no significant differences in within the default mode network (DMN) and frontoparietal network (FPN) in MDD patients, challenging previous assumptions about these networks as key indicators of MDD.

Caveats

  • The study's findings may not be generalizable to adolescents or elderly populations, as the sample focused on adults aged 18–65. Additionally, the lack of detailed symptom cluster analysis limits the ability to relate alterations to specific depressive symptoms.
  • The absence of information on treatment history, including medication effects, may confound the results, as medicated patients showed lower in certain networks compared to unmedicated patients.

Definitions

  • Functional connectivity (FC): The temporal correlation between spatially remote brain regions during rest, indicating how brain networks communicate.
  • Network segregation: A measure of the balance between connections within a network and connections to other networks, reflecting functional specialization.

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