Frontiers in Psychiatry (Feb 2019)

Neuroimaging Correlates of Suicidality in Decision-Making Circuits in Posttraumatic Stress Disorder

  • Jennifer Barredo,
  • Jennifer Barredo,
  • Emily Aiken,
  • Mascha van 't Wout-Frank,
  • Mascha van 't Wout-Frank,
  • Benjamin D. Greenberg,
  • Benjamin D. Greenberg,
  • Benjamin D. Greenberg,
  • Linda L. Carpenter,
  • Linda L. Carpenter,
  • Linda L. Carpenter,
  • Noah S. Philip,
  • Noah S. Philip,
  • Noah S. Philip

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00044
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 10

Abstract

Read online

In depression, brain and behavioral correlates of decision-making differ between individuals with and without suicidal thoughts and behaviors. Though promising, it remains unknown if these potential biomarkers of suicidality will generalize to other high-risk clinical populations. To preliminarily assess whether brain structure or function tracked suicidality in individuals with posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), we measured resting-state functional connectivity and cortical thickness in two functional networks involved in decision-making, a ventral fronto-striatal reward network and a lateral frontal cognitive control network. Neuroimaging data and self-reported suicidality ratings, and suicide-related hospitalization data were obtained from 50 outpatients with PTSD and also from 15 healthy controls, and all were subjected to seed-based resting-state functional connectivity and cortical thickness analyses using a priori seeds from reward and cognitive control networks. First, general linear models (GLM) were used to evaluate whether ROI-to-ROI functional connectivity was predictive of self-reported suicidality after false discovery rate (FDR)-correction for multiple comparisons and covariance of age and depression symptoms. Next, regional cortical thickness statistics were included as predictors of ROI-to-ROI functional connectivity in follow-up GLMs evaluating structure-function relationships. Functional connectivity between reward regions was positively correlated with suicidality (p-FDR ≤ 0.05). Functional connectivity of the lateral pars orbitalis to anterior cingulate/paracingulate control regions also tracked suicidality (p-FDR ≤ 0.05). Furthermore, cortical thickness in anterior cingulate/paracingulate was associated with functional correlates of suicidality in the control network (p-FDR < 0.05). These results provide a preliminary demonstration that biomarkers of suicidality in decision-making networks observed in depression may generalize to PTSD and highlight the promise of these circuits as transdiagnostic biomarkers of suicidality.

Keywords