Prospective Relations between Cortical Thickness and Change in Internalizing Symptoms are Moderated by Chronic Stress Exposure in Adolescents with Depression and Anxiety
Romer AL, Hubbard NA, Auerbach RP, Yendiki A, Ghosh S, Henin A, Hofmann SG, Gabrieli JDE, Whitfield-Gabrieli S, Pizzagalli DA
Identifiers and access
- DOI
- 10.1177/21677026251351850
- PubMed
- 40852172
- PMC
- PMC12369654
Key findings
In 203 adolescents from the BANDA study, lower baseline cortical thickness in bilateral temporal pole and left insula predicted one-year increases in internalising symptoms, with the relationship moderated by chronic stress — pointing to stress-sensitive structural markers of worsening depression and anxiety.
Abstract
Source: pubmed
Brain structural alterations have been associated with internalizing symptoms concurrently. Less is known about whether these alterations relate to change in internalizing psychopathology during adolescence, a sensitive period for the effects of stress on neurodevelopment and internalizing symptoms. We examined whether cortical thickness (CT) was prospectively related to change in an internalizing factor in 203 adolescents (aged 14-17) with depression and/or anxiety diagnoses or no diagnosis from the Boston Adolescent Neuroimaging of Depression and Anxiety study. We conducted residualized change regression models to determine whether baseline CT was associated with one-year change in internalizing factor scores, and whether chronic stress exposure moderated these relations. Lower bilateral temporal pole and left insula CT were associated with one-year increases in internalizing factor scores and were moderated by chronic stress. These novel results identify specific cortical structure features that might contribute to worsening depression and anxiety, particularly in adolescents with high chronic stress.
Topics
- mental-health-psychiatry
- child-development-education
Lab authors
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