lancet-header

Preprints with The Lancet is part of SSRN´s First Look, a place where journals identify content of interest prior to publication. Authors have opted in at submission to The Lancet family of journals to post their preprints on Preprints with The Lancet. The usual SSRN checks and a Lancet-specific check for appropriateness and transparency have been applied. Preprints available here are not Lancet publications or necessarily under review with a Lancet journal. These preprints are early stage research papers that have not been peer-reviewed. The findings should not be used for clinical or public health decision making and should not be presented to a lay audience without highlighting that they are preliminary and have not been peer-reviewed. For more information on this collaboration, see the comments published in The Lancet about the trial period, and our decision to make this a permanent offering, or visit The Lancet´s FAQ page, and for any feedback please contact preprints@lancet.com.

Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Activity is Impaired in Currently-Depressed Patients, But Intact in Individuals at High Risk: A Three-Group Functional MRI Study of Hot and Cold Cognition

45 Pages Posted: 3 Aug 2018

See all articles by Camilla Nord

Camilla Nord

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience; University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Department of Psychiatry

D. Chamith Halahakoon

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience

Niall Lally

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience; University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Department of Psychiatry ; Government of the United States of America, Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Mental Health, Intramural Research Program, Experimental

Tarun Limbachya

NHS Foundation Trust - Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust

Steve Pilling

University College London - Department of Clinical, Educational, and Health Psychology

Jonathan Roiser

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience

More...

Abstract

Background: The neural mechanisms affecting risk for and resilience to depression are largely unknown. Modern neuropsychological models of depression posit that negatively biased emotional ("hot") processing confers risk for depression, while preserved non-emotional ("cold") cognition might promote resilience. However, few studies have compared neural responses during hot and cold cognitive tasks in samples at high-risk for depression and those currently experiencing a major depressive episode.
Methods: We recruited 99 participants: 39 unmedicated currently-depressed patients, 30 unaffected first-degree relatives of depressed individuals, and 30 matched healthy controls with no first-degree relatives with depression. Primary analyses assessed neural activation on two functional magnetic resonance imaging tasks previously associated with depression: dorsolateral prefrontal cortex (DLPFC) responsivity during the N-back working memory task; and amygdala and subgenual anterior cingulate cortex (sgACC) responsivity during incidental emotional face processing.
Outcomes: Depressed patients exhibited significantly attenuated working memory-related DLPFC activation, compared to both healthy volunteers and unaffected relatives; unaffected relatives did not differ from healthy volunteers. We did not observe a complementary pattern during emotion processing.
Interpretation: These findings have important implications for understanding the neural mechanisms of risk and resilience in depression. Specifically, they are consistent with the proposal that preserved cold cognitive function may confer resilience to developing depression in at-risk individuals. However, this requires confirmation in longitudinal studies.
Funding: This work was supported by the Brain and Behavior Research Foundation (grant number 20162) to JPR and a Brain Research Trust PhD studentship awarded to CLN.
Conflict of Interest: JPR consults for Cambridge Cognition and Takeda Ltd. The other authors report no conflict of interest.
Ethical Approval Statement: The authors assert that all procedures contributing to this work comply with the ethical standards of the relevant national and institutional committees on human experimentation and with the Helsinki Declaration of 1975, as revised in 2008.

Keywords: depression, dorsolateral prefrontal cortex, resilience, risk, cognition, working memory

Suggested Citation

Nord, Camilla and Halahakoon, D. Chamith and Lally, Niall and Limbachya, Tarun and Pilling, Steve and Roiser, Jonathan, Dorsolateral Prefrontal Cortex Activity is Impaired in Currently-Depressed Patients, But Intact in Individuals at High Risk: A Three-Group Functional MRI Study of Hot and Cold Cognition (June 28, 2018). Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=3204760 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.3204760

Camilla Nord (Contact Author)

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience ( email )

17 Queen Square
London WC1N 3AR
United Kingdom

University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Department of Psychiatry ( email )

United Kingdom

D. Chamith Halahakoon

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience

17 Queen Square
London WC1N 3AR
United Kingdom

Niall Lally

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience

17 Queen Square
London WC1N 3AR
United Kingdom

University of Cambridge, Addenbrookes Hospital, Department of Psychiatry

United Kingdom

Government of the United States of America, Department of Health and Human Services, National Institutes of Health (NIH), National Institute of Mental Health, Intramural Research Program, Experimental

United States

Tarun Limbachya

NHS Foundation Trust - Camden and Islington NHS Foundation Trust

United Kingdom

Steve Pilling

University College London - Department of Clinical, Educational, and Health Psychology

United Kingdom

Jonathan Roiser

University College London - Institute of Cognitive Neuroscience ( email )

17 Queen Square
London WC1N 3AR
United Kingdom