Life Sciences

Neuroimaging evidence for structural correlates in adolescents resilient to polysubstance use: A five-year follow-up study

Publié le - European Neuropsychopharmacology

Auteurs : Irina Filippi, André Galinowski, Hervé Lemaître, Christian Massot, Pascal Zille, Pauline Frère, Rubén Miranda-Marcos, Christian Trichard, Stella Guldner, Hélène Vulser, Marie-Laure Paillère-Martinot, Erin Burke Quinlan, Sylvane Desrivières, Penny Gowland, Arun Bokde, Hugh Garavan, Andreas Heinz, Henrik Walter, Laura Daedelow, Christian Büchel, Uli Bromberg, Patricia Conrod, Herta Flor, Tobias Banaschewski, Frauke Nees, Stefan Heintz, Michael Smolka, Nora Vetter, Dimitri Papadopoulos-Orfanos, Robert Whelan, Louise Poustka, Tomáš Paus, Gunter Schumann, Eric Artiges, Jean-Luc Martinot

Early initiation of polysubstance use (PSU) is a strong predictor of subsequent addiction, however scarce individuals present resilience capacity. This neuroimaging study aimed to investigate structural correlates associated with cessation or reduction of PSU and determine the extent to which brain structural features accounted for this resilient outcome. Participants from a European community-based cohort self-reported their alcohol, tobacco and cannabis use frequency at ages 14, 16 and 19 and had neuroimaging sessions at ages 14 and 19. We included three groups in the study: the resilient-to-PSU participants showed PSU at 16 and/or 14 but no more at 19 (n = 18), the enduring polysubstance users at 19 displayed PSU continuation from 14 or 16 (n = 193) and the controls were abstinent or low drinking participants (n = 460). We conducted between-group comparisons of grey matter volumes on whole brain using voxel-based morphometry and regional fractional anisotropy using tract-based spatial statistics. Random-forests machine-learning approach generated individual-level PSU-behavior predictions based on personality and neuroimaging features. Adolescents resilient to PSU showed significant larger grey matter volumes in the bilateral cingulate gyrus compared with enduring polysubstance users and controls at ages 19 and 14 (p