Admon Roee, Kaiser Roselinde H, Dillon Daniel G, Beltzer Miranda, Goer Franziska, Olson David P, Vitaliano Gordana, Pizzagalli Diego A
From the Center for Depression, Anxiety, and Stress Research and the McLean Imaging Center, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Mass.; and the Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston.
Am J Psychiatry. 2017 Apr 1;174(4):378-386. doi: 10.1176/appi.ajp.2016.16010111. Epub 2016 Oct 24.
Major depressive disorder is characterized by reduced reward-related striatal activation and dysfunctional reward learning, putatively reflecting decreased dopaminergic signaling. The goal of this study was to test whether a pharmacological challenge designed to facilitate dopaminergic transmission can enhance striatal responses to reward and improve reward learning in depressed individuals.
In a double-blind placebo-controlled design, 46 unmedicated depressed participants and 43 healthy control participants were randomly assigned to receive either placebo or a single low dose (50 mg) of the D/D receptor antagonist amisulpride, which is believed to increase dopamine signaling through presynaptic autoreceptor blockade. To investigate the effects of increased dopaminergic transmission on reward-related striatal function and behavior, a monetary incentive delay task (in conjunction with functional MRI) and a probabilistic reward learning task were administered at absorption peaks of amisulpride.
Depressed participants selected previously rewarded stimuli less frequently than did control participants, indicating reduced reward learning, but this effect was not modulated by amisulpride. Relative to depressed participants receiving placebo (and control participants receiving amisulpride), depressed participants receiving amisulpride exhibited increased striatal activation and potentiated corticostriatal functional connectivity between the nucleus accumbens and the midcingulate cortex in response to monetary rewards. Stronger corticostriatal connectivity in response to rewards predicted better reward learning among depressed individuals receiving amisulpride as well as among control participants receiving placebo.
Acute enhancement of dopaminergic transmission potentiated reward-related striatal activation and corticostriatal functional connectivity in depressed individuals but had no behavioral effects. Taken together, the results suggest that targeted pharmacological treatments may normalize neural correlates of reward processing in depression; despite such acute effects on neural function, behavioral modification may require more chronic exposure. This is consistent with previous reports that antidepressant effects of amisulpride in depression emerged after sustained administration.
重度抑郁症的特征是与奖赏相关的纹状体激活减少以及奖赏学习功能失调,据推测这反映了多巴胺能信号传递的减少。本研究的目的是测试一种旨在促进多巴胺能传递的药理学激发是否能增强抑郁症患者纹状体对奖赏的反应并改善奖赏学习。
在一项双盲安慰剂对照设计中,46名未服药的抑郁症参与者和43名健康对照参与者被随机分配接受安慰剂或单剂量低剂量(50毫克)的D2/D3受体拮抗剂氨磺必利,据信该药物通过阻断突触前自身受体来增加多巴胺信号。为了研究多巴胺能传递增加对与奖赏相关的纹状体功能和行为的影响,在氨磺必利的吸收峰值时进行了金钱激励延迟任务(结合功能磁共振成像)和概率奖赏学习任务。
抑郁症参与者选择先前获得奖赏刺激的频率低于对照参与者,表明奖赏学习减少,但这种效应未被氨磺必利调节。相对于接受安慰剂的抑郁症参与者(以及接受氨磺必利的对照参与者),接受氨磺必利的抑郁症参与者在对金钱奖励的反应中表现出纹状体激活增加以及伏隔核与扣带前回之间的皮质纹状体功能连接增强。对奖赏更强的皮质纹状体连接预测了接受氨磺必利的抑郁症个体以及接受安慰剂的对照参与者中更好的奖赏学习。
多巴胺能传递的急性增强增强了抑郁症患者与奖赏相关的纹状体激活和皮质纹状体功能连接,但没有行为效应。综合来看,结果表明靶向药物治疗可能使抑郁症中奖赏处理的神经相关性正常化;尽管对神经功能有这种急性影响,但行为改变可能需要更长时间的暴露。这与先前的报道一致,即氨磺必利在抑郁症中的抗抑郁作用在持续给药后出现。