Luke J Norman1, Gustavo Sudre1, Marine Bouyssi-Kobar1, Wendy Sharp1, Philip Shaw1. 1. Section on Neurobehavioral and Clinical Research, Social and Behavioral Research Branch, National Human Genome Research Institute, NIH, Bethesda, Md. (Norman, Sudre, Bouyssi-Kobar, Sharp, Shaw); Office of the Clinical Director, NIMH, Bethesda, Md. (Sharp, Shaw).
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: Psychostimulants are first-line pharmacological treatments for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), although symptom reduction varies widely between patients and these individual differences in treatment response are poorly understood. The authors sought to examine whether the resting-state functional connectivity within and between cingulo-opercular, striato-thalamic, and default mode networks was associated with treatment response to psychostimulant medication, and whether this relationship changed with development. METHODS: Patients with ADHD (N=110; 196 observations; mean age at first observation, 10.83 years, SD=2.2) and typically developing control subjects (N=142; 330 observations; mean age at first observation, 10.49 years, SD=2.81) underwent functional neuroimaging on up to five occasions during development (age range, 6-17 years). For patients, symptoms were assessed on and off psychostimulant medication (methylphenidate-based treatments: N=132 observations, 67%; amphetamine-based treatments: N=64 observations, 33%) using the Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents for parents. Linear mixed-effects models examined whether resting-state connectivity was associated with treatment response and its interaction with age. Comparisons with typically developing control subjects were performed to contextualize any significant associations. RESULTS: Resting-state connectivity within the cingulo-opercular network was associated with a significant interaction between treatment response and age. Specifically, worse responses to treatment compared with better responses to treatment among patients and compared with typically developing control subjects were associated with an atypical increase in cingulo-opercular connectivity with increasing age from childhood to adolescence. CONCLUSIONS: This work delineates how resting-state connectivity may be associated over development with response to psychostimulants in ADHD. Functioning and development within the cingulo-opercular network may warrant further investigation as a contributor to differential response to psychostimulants.
OBJECTIVE: Psychostimulants are first-line pharmacological treatments for attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD), although symptom reduction varies widely between patients and these individual differences in treatment response are poorly understood. The authors sought to examine whether the resting-state functional connectivity within and between cingulo-opercular, striato-thalamic, and default mode networks was associated with treatment response to psychostimulant medication, and whether this relationship changed with development. METHODS: Patients with ADHD (N=110; 196 observations; mean age at first observation, 10.83 years, SD=2.2) and typically developing control subjects (N=142; 330 observations; mean age at first observation, 10.49 years, SD=2.81) underwent functional neuroimaging on up to five occasions during development (age range, 6-17 years). For patients, symptoms were assessed on and off psychostimulant medication (methylphenidate-based treatments: N=132 observations, 67%; amphetamine-based treatments: N=64 observations, 33%) using the Diagnostic Interview for Children and Adolescents for parents. Linear mixed-effects models examined whether resting-state connectivity was associated with treatment response and its interaction with age. Comparisons with typically developing control subjects were performed to contextualize any significant associations. RESULTS: Resting-state connectivity within the cingulo-opercular network was associated with a significant interaction between treatment response and age. Specifically, worse responses to treatment compared with better responses to treatment among patients and compared with typically developing control subjects were associated with an atypical increase in cingulo-opercular connectivity with increasing age from childhood to adolescence. CONCLUSIONS: This work delineates how resting-state connectivity may be associated over development with response to psychostimulants in ADHD. Functioning and development within the cingulo-opercular network may warrant further investigation as a contributor to differential response to psychostimulants.
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