Comprehensive Psychiatry (May 2024)

Pallidum volume as a predictor for the effectiveness of mindfulness-based cognitive therapy and psycho-education in unmedicated patients with obsessive-compulsive disorder

  • Chen Zhang,
  • Xiaochen Zhang,
  • Wenqing Li,
  • Tianran Zhang,
  • Zongfeng Zhang,
  • Lu Lu,
  • Fabrizio Didonna,
  • Qing Fan

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 131
p. 152462

Abstract

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Background: Mindfulness-based cognitive therapy (MBCT) has been documented to be effective in treating obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). However, the neurobiological basis of MBCT remains largely elusive, which makes it clinically challenging to predict which patients are more likely to respond poorly. Hence, identifying biomarkers for predicting treatment outcomes holds both scientific and clinical values. This prognostic study aims to investigate whether pre-treatment brain morphological metrics can predict the effectiveness of MBCT, compared with psycho-education (PE) as an active placebo, among patients with OCD. Methods: A total of 32 patients with OCD were included in this prognostic study. They received magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) brain scans before treatment. Subsequently, 16 patients received 10 weeks of MBCT, while the other 16 patients underwent a 10-week PE program. The effectiveness of the treatments was primarily assessed by the reduction rate of the Yale-Brown Obsessive-Compulsive Scale (Y-BOCS) total score before and after the treatment. We investigated whether several predefined OCD-associated brain morphological metrics, selected based on prior published studies by the ENIGMA Consortium, could predict the treatment effectiveness. Results: Both the MBCT and PE groups exhibited substantial reductions in Y-BOCS scores over 10 weeks of treatment, with the MBCT group showing a larger reduction. Notably, the pallidum total volume was associated with treatment effectiveness, irrespective of the intervention group. Specifically, a linear regression model utilizing the pre-treatment pallidum volume to predict the treatment effectiveness suggested that a one-cubic-centimeter increase in pallidum volume corresponded to a 22.3% decrease in the Y-BOCS total score reduction rate. Conclusions: Pallidum volume may serve as a promising predictor for the effectiveness of MBCT and PE, and perhaps, other treatments with the shared mechanisms by MBCT and PE, among patients with OCD.

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