Mega-analysis of the brain-age gap in substance use disorder: An ENIGMA Addiction working group study

IF 5.2 1区 医学 Q1 PSYCHIATRY
Addiction Pub Date : 2024-08-21 DOI:10.1111/add.16621
Freda Scheffler, Jonathan Ipser, Devarshi Pancholi, Alistair Murphy, Zhipeng Cao, Jonatan Ottino-González, ENIGMA Addiction Working Group, Paul M. Thompson, Steve Shoptaw, Patricia Conrod, Scott Mackey, Hugh Garavan, Dan J. Stein
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Abstract

Background and Aims

The brain age gap (BAG), calculated as the difference between a machine learning model-based predicted brain age and chronological age, has been increasingly investigated in psychiatric disorders. Tobacco and alcohol use are associated with increased BAG; however, no studies have compared global and regional BAG across substances other than alcohol and tobacco. This study aimed to compare global and regional estimates of brain age in individuals with substance use disorders and healthy controls.

Design

This was a cross-sectional study.

Setting

This is an Enhancing Neuro Imaging through Meta-Analysis Consortium (ENIGMA) Addiction Working Group study including data from 38 global sites.

Participants

This study included 2606 participants, of whom 1725 were cases with a substance use disorder and 881 healthy controls.

Measurements

This study used the Kaufmann brain age prediction algorithms to generate global and regional brain age estimates using T1 weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans. We used linear mixed effects models to compare global and regional (FreeSurfer lobestrict output) BAG (i.e. predicted minus chronological age) between individuals with one of five primary substance use disorders as well as healthy controls.

Findings

Alcohol use disorder (β = −5.49, t = −5.51, p < 0.001) was associated with higher global BAG, whereas amphetamine-type stimulant use disorder (β = 3.44, t = 2.42, p = 0.02) was associated with lower global BAG in the separate substance-specific models.

Conclusions

People with alcohol use disorder appear to have a higher brain-age gap than people without alcohol use disorder, which is consistent with other evidence of the negative impact of alcohol on the brain.

Abstract Image

药物使用障碍中脑龄差距的大型分析:ENIGMA成瘾问题工作组的一项研究。
背景和目的:脑年龄差距(BAG)是指基于机器学习模型预测的脑年龄与实际年龄之间的差值。烟草和酒精的使用与脑年龄差距的增加有关;然而,除烟草和酒精外,还没有研究比较过其他物质的全球和区域脑年龄差距。本研究旨在比较药物使用障碍患者和健康对照组的全球和区域脑年龄估计值:设计:这是一项横断面研究:这是一项 "通过元分析增强神经成像联合会(ENIGMA)成瘾工作组 "的研究,包括来自全球 38 个地点的数据:这项研究包括 2606 名参与者,其中 1725 人为药物使用障碍病例,881 人为健康对照组:本研究使用考夫曼脑年龄预测算法,利用 T1 加权磁共振成像(MRI)扫描生成全球和区域脑年龄估计值。我们使用线性混合效应模型比较了患有五种主要药物使用障碍之一的患者和健康对照组的整体和区域(FreeSurfer lobestrict 输出)BAG(即预测年龄减去实际年龄):酗酒障碍(β = -5.49,t = -5.51,p 结论:酗酒障碍患者的 BAG(即预测年龄减去实际年龄)与健康对照组的 BAG(即预测年龄减去实际年龄)之间存在差异:与没有酒精使用障碍的人相比,有酒精使用障碍的人的脑年龄差距似乎更大,这与酒精对大脑的负面影响的其他证据是一致的。
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来源期刊
Addiction
Addiction 医学-精神病学
CiteScore
10.80
自引率
6.70%
发文量
319
审稿时长
3 months
期刊介绍: Addiction publishes peer-reviewed research reports on pharmacological and behavioural addictions, bringing together research conducted within many different disciplines. Its goal is to serve international and interdisciplinary scientific and clinical communication, to strengthen links between science and policy, and to stimulate and enhance the quality of debate. We seek submissions that are not only technically competent but are also original and contain information or ideas of fresh interest to our international readership. We seek to serve low- and middle-income (LAMI) countries as well as more economically developed countries. Addiction’s scope spans human experimental, epidemiological, social science, historical, clinical and policy research relating to addiction, primarily but not exclusively in the areas of psychoactive substance use and/or gambling. In addition to original research, the journal features editorials, commentaries, reviews, letters, and book reviews.
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