Department of Psychiatry, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts; Center for Depression, Anxiety and Stress Research, McLean Hospital, Belmont, Massachusetts.
Department of Psychiatry, Columbia University, New York, New York; Division of Clinical Developmental Neuroscience, Sackler Institute, New York, New York.
Biol Psychiatry Cogn Neurosci Neuroimaging. 2021 Jan;6(1):39-49. doi: 10.1016/j.bpsc.2020.07.010. Epub 2020 Jul 23.
Approximately half of depressed adolescents fail to respond to cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT). Given the variability in response, it is important to identify pretreatment characteristics that predict prognosis. Knowledge of which depressed adolescents are likely to exhibit a positive versus poor outcome to CBT may have important clinical implications (e.g., informing treatment recommendations). Emerging evidence suggests that neural reward responsiveness represents one promising predictor.
Adolescents with major depressive disorder (n = 36) received CBT and completed a reward task at 3 time points (pretreatment, midtreatment and posttreatment) while 128-channel electroencephalographic data were acquired. Healthy control participants (n = 29) completed the same task at 3 corresponding time points. Analyses focused on event-related potentials linked to 2 stages of neural processing: initial response to rewards (reward positivity) and later, elaborative processing (late positive potential). Moreover, time-frequency analyses decomposed the reward positivity into 2 constituent components: reward-related delta and loss-related theta activity.
Multilevel modeling revealed that greater pretreatment reward responsiveness, as measured by the late positive potential to rewards, predicted greater depressive symptom change. In addition, a group × condition × time interaction emerged for theta activity to losses, reflecting normalization of theta power in the group with major depressive disorder from baseline to posttreatment.
An event-related potential measure of sustained (late positive potential)-but not initial (reward positivity)-reward responsiveness predicted symptom improvement, which may help inform which depressed adolescents are most likely to benefit from CBT. In addition to alleviating depression, successful CBT may attenuate underlying neural (theta) hypersensitivity to negative outcomes in depressed youths.
大约一半的抑郁青少年对认知行为疗法(CBT)没有反应。鉴于反应的可变性,确定预测预后的治疗前特征非常重要。了解哪些抑郁青少年可能对 CBT 表现出积极或不良的结果,可能具有重要的临床意义(例如,为治疗建议提供信息)。新出现的证据表明,神经奖励反应性是一个很有前途的预测指标。
36 名患有重度抑郁症的青少年接受 CBT,并在 3 个时间点(治疗前、治疗中和治疗后)完成奖励任务,同时采集 128 通道脑电图数据。29 名健康对照组参与者在 3 个相应的时间点完成相同的任务。分析集中在与神经处理的两个阶段相关的事件相关电位上:对奖励的初始反应(奖励正性)和后来的精细处理(晚期正性电位)。此外,时频分析将奖励正性分解为 2 个组成成分:奖励相关的 delta 和损失相关的 theta 活动。
多层次模型显示,通过奖励的晚期正性电位来衡量的治疗前奖励反应性越大,预测抑郁症状变化越大。此外,还出现了一个组间条件时间的交互作用,反映了从基线到治疗后的重度抑郁症组中损失相关的 theta 活动的正常化。
与初始(奖励正性)奖励反应性(晚期正性电位)相比,事件相关电位测量的持续(晚期正性电位)奖励反应性预测了症状改善,这可能有助于确定哪些抑郁青少年最有可能从 CBT 中受益。除了缓解抑郁外,成功的 CBT 可能会减轻抑郁青少年对负面结果的潜在神经(theta)过度敏感。