Transdiagnostic Mood, Anxiety and Trauma Symptom Factors in Alcohol Use Disorder: Neural Correlates Across Three Brain Networks.

Journal: Biological psychiatry. Cognitive neuroscience and neuroimaging

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Affiliated Institutions:  Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA; Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA. Electronic address: lten@stanford.edu. Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Stanford University School of Medicine, Stanford, CA, USA; Mental Illness Research Education and Clinical Center, VA Palo Alto Health Care System, Palo Alto, CA, USA.

Abstract summary 

Alcohol use disorder (AUD) is associated with high rates of trauma, mood, and anxiety disorders. Individual symptoms highly overlap across diagnoses, highlighting the need for a transdiagnostic approach. Further, there is limited research on how transdiagnostic psychopathology impacts the neural correlates of AUD. Thus, we aimed to identify symptom factors spanning diagnoses and how they relate to the neurocircuitry of addiction.Eighty-six Veterans with AUD completed self-report measures and reward, incentive salience and cognitive control fMRI tasks. Factor analysis was performed on self-reported trauma, depression, anxiety, and stress symptoms to obtain transdiagnostic symptom compositions. Neural correlates with a-priori-defined regions of interest in the three networks were assessed. Independent samples t-tests compared the same nodes by DSM-5 diagnosis.Four symptom factors were identified: trauma distress, negative affect, hyperarousal, and somatic anxiety. Trauma distress score was associated with increased cognitive control activity regions during response inhibition (dACC). Negative affect related to lower activation in reward regions (R.Caudate) but higher activation in cognitive control regions during response inhibition (L.dlPFC). Hyperarousal related to lower reward activity during monetary reward anticipation (L.Caudate, R.Caudate) Somatic anxiety was not significantly associated with brain activation. No difference in neural activity was found by PTSD, MDD or GAD diagnosis CONCLUSION: These preliminary, hypothesis-generating findings offer transdiagnostic symptom factors that are differentially associated with neural function and could guide us towards a brain-based classification of psychiatric dysfunction in AUD. Results warrant further investigation of transdiagnostic approaches to symptoms in addiction.

Authors & Co-authors:  Tenekedjieva McCalley Goldstein-Piekarski Williams Padula

Study Outcome 

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Statistics
Citations : 
Authors :  5
Identifiers
Doi : S2451-9022(24)00064-8
SSN : 2451-9030
Study Population
Male,Female
Mesh Terms
Other Terms
AUD;anxiety;fMRI;mood;transdiagnostic;trauma
Study Design
Study Approach
Country of Study
Publication Country
United States