Anxiety Disorders Clinical Trial
Official title:
Neural Circuitry and Risk for Depression in Adolescents: A Study Using Functional Magnetic Resonance Imaging
Verified date | October 27, 2016 |
Source | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center (CC) |
Contact | n/a |
Is FDA regulated | No |
Health authority | |
Study type | Observational |
Anxiety in children of parents with major depressive disorder (MDD) poses a particularly high
risk for later-life MDD. In adults, MDD involves dysfunction in prefrontal brain regions that
regulate attention to emotional stimuli. These abnormalities: i) have been found primarily in
adults with specific familial forms of MDD; ii) persist after recovery from MDD, and iii)
relate to anxiety. These findings raise the possibility that risk for MDD is tied to
dysfunction in prefrontal regions involved in regulation of emotion, which possibly manifests
as early-life anxiety. If this possibility were confirmed in never-depressed adolescents at
high risk for MDD, the findings would provide key insights into the developmental
neurobiology of MDD. The goal of this protocol is to study the neural substrate of risk for
MDD in young people. This protocol tests the hypothesis that adolescents at high risk for MDD
by virtue of childhood anxiety and parental history of MDD exhibit dysfunction in prefrontal
cortex and amygdala, regions involved in emotion regulation. This goal will be accomplished
through fMRI studies of emotion regulation in high and low-risk adolescents.
For this research, at-risk adolescents will be recruited from participants in an NIMH-funded
extramural study at New York University (NYU) examining the biology of risk for anxiety and
depressive disorders. Over a three-year period, 45 high-risk probands and 60 low-risk
comparisons will be studied, including 20 comparisons from the NYU sample and 40 from the
Washington DC metropolitan area. In the present protocol, to be conducted at NIH, subjects
will undergo volumetric MRI scans to assess structural abnormalities in the prefrontal cortex
and medial temporal lobe. They will complete a series of four out-of-scanner cognitive tasks
and two fMRI-based cognitive tasks that measure modulation of attention to emotional stimuli.
The fMRI tasks are hypothesized to differentially engage the prefrontal cortex and amygdala
in low vs. high risk subjects. These tasks will be used to test the hypothesis that at-risk
individuals exhibit enhanced amygdala and reduced prefrontal activation on the fMRI
emotion/attention tasks.
Status | Completed |
Enrollment | 88 |
Est. completion date | October 27, 2016 |
Est. primary completion date | |
Accepts healthy volunteers | No |
Gender | All |
Age group | 10 Years to 55 Years |
Eligibility |
- OFFSPRING SUBJECTS - INCLUSION CRITERIA: Age: 10-30. Can give consent/assent. Parents will provide consent for all minors. All subjects will have IQ greater than 80. High risk Psychopathology: Offspring of adults with a history of MDD. Low risk Psychopathology: Offspring of adults with no history of MDD and low developmental levels of emotion dysregulation. Subjects born to parents with only anxiety disorders will be included in this group. OFFSPRING SUBJECTS - EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Any medical condition that increases risk for MRI (e.g. pacemaker, metallic foreign body in eye). Pregnancy: Both groups: All subjects will be free of current impairing affective disorders, separation anxiety disorder, social anxiety disorder, panic disorder, generalized anxiety disorder, PTSD, ADHD, as well as lifetime history of substance dependence, psychosis, pervasive developmental disorder, major affective disorder, obsessive compulsive disorder, conduct disorder, anorexia. All subjects will be born to parents with no history of schizophrenia or bipolar disorder. PARENT SUBJECTS - INCLUSION CRITERIA: Age: 18-55 Can give consent/assent Offspring: All subjects will have offspring participating in this same protocol. Have an IQ greater than 80 Past history of MDD No lifetime history of MDD ADULT SUBJECTS - EXCLUSION CRITERIA: Any medical condition that increases risk for MRI (e.g. pacemaker, metallic foreign body in eye) Pregnancy: Both groups: All subjects will be free of current significantly impairing affective disorders, psychotropic medications, as well as lifetime history of substance dependence, psychosis, conduct disorder, or anorexia. |
Country | Name | City | State |
---|---|---|---|
United States | National Institutes of Health Clinical Center, 9000 Rockville Pike | Bethesda | Maryland |
Lead Sponsor | Collaborator |
---|---|
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH) |
United States,
Drevets WC, Ongür D, Price JL. Neuroimaging abnormalities in the subgenual prefrontal cortex: implications for the pathophysiology of familial mood disorders. Mol Psychiatry. 1998 May;3(3):220-6, 190-1. Review. — View Citation
Drevets WC. Neuroimaging and neuropathological studies of depression: implications for the cognitive-emotional features of mood disorders. Curr Opin Neurobiol. 2001 Apr;11(2):240-9. Review. — View Citation
Drevets WC. Neuroimaging studies of mood disorders. Biol Psychiatry. 2000 Oct 15;48(8):813-29. — View Citation
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