Kathleen A Garrison1, Sarah W Yip2, Iris M Balodis3, Kathleen M Carroll4, Marc N Potenza5, Suchitra Krishnan-Sarin6. 1. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States. Electronic address: kathleen.garrison@yale.edu. 2. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States; The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Yale School of Medicine, United States. 3. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States; Department of Psychiatry and Behavioural Neurosciences, McMaster University, Canada. 4. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States. 5. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States; The National Center on Addiction and Substance Abuse, Yale School of Medicine, United States; Connecticut Mental Health Center, United States; Department of Neuroscience, Yale School of Medicine, United States; Child Study Center, Yale School of Medicine, United States. 6. Department of Psychiatry, Yale School of Medicine, United States; Connecticut Mental Health Center, United States.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Tobacco use is often initiated during adolescence and continued into adulthood despite desires to quit. A better understanding of the neural correlates of abstinence from smoking in adolescents may inform more effective smoking cessation interventions. Neural reward systems are implicated in tobacco use disorder, and adolescent smokers have shown reduced reward-related ventral striatal activation related to increased smoking. METHODS: The current study evaluated nondrug reward anticipation in adolescent smokers using a monetary incentive delay task in fMRI pre- and post- smoking cessation treatment (n=14). This study tested how changes in neural responses to reward anticipation pre- to post-treatment were related to reduced smoking. An exploratory analysis in a larger sample of adolescents with only pre-treatment fMRI (n=28) evaluated how neural responses to reward anticipation were related to behavioral inhibition and behavioral activation scales. RESULTS: Adolescent smokers showed pre- to post-treatment increases in reward anticipation-related activity in the bilateral nucleus accumbens and insula, and medial prefrontal cortex, and greater increases in reward anticipation-related activity were correlated with larger percent days of smoking abstinence during treatment. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced smoking during smoking cessation treatment is associated with a "recovery of function" in frontostriatal responses to nondrug reward anticipation in adolescent smokers, although comparison with a developmental control group of adolescent nonsmokers is warranted.
BACKGROUND: Tobacco use is often initiated during adolescence and continued into adulthood despite desires to quit. A better understanding of the neural correlates of abstinence from smoking in adolescents may inform more effective smoking cessation interventions. Neural reward systems are implicated in tobacco use disorder, and adolescent smokers have shown reduced reward-related ventral striatal activation related to increased smoking. METHODS: The current study evaluated nondrug reward anticipation in adolescent smokers using a monetary incentive delay task in fMRI pre- and post- smoking cessation treatment (n=14). This study tested how changes in neural responses to reward anticipation pre- to post-treatment were related to reduced smoking. An exploratory analysis in a larger sample of adolescents with only pre-treatment fMRI (n=28) evaluated how neural responses to reward anticipation were related to behavioral inhibition and behavioral activation scales. RESULTS: Adolescent smokers showed pre- to post-treatment increases in reward anticipation-related activity in the bilateral nucleus accumbens and insula, and medial prefrontal cortex, and greater increases in reward anticipation-related activity were correlated with larger percent days of smoking abstinence during treatment. CONCLUSIONS: These findings suggest that reduced smoking during smoking cessation treatment is associated with a "recovery of function" in frontostriatal responses to nondrug reward anticipation in adolescent smokers, although comparison with a developmental control group of adolescent nonsmokers is warranted.
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