NeuroImage: Clinical (Jan 2020)

Image acquisition and quality assurance in the Boston Adolescent Neuroimaging of Depression and Anxiety study

  • Viviana Siless,
  • Nicholas A. Hubbard,
  • Robert Jones,
  • Jonathan Wang,
  • Nicole Lo,
  • Clemens C.C. Bauer,
  • Mathias Goncalves,
  • Isabelle Frosch,
  • Daniel Norton,
  • Genesis Vergara,
  • Kristina Conroy,
  • Flavia Vaz De Souza,
  • Isabelle M. Rosso,
  • Aleena Hay Wickham,
  • Elizabeth Ann Cosby,
  • Megan Pinaire,
  • Dina Hirshfeld-Becker,
  • Diego A. Pizzagalli,
  • Aude Henin,
  • Stefan G. Hofmann,
  • Randy P. Auerbach,
  • Satrajit Ghosh,
  • John Gabrieli,
  • Susan Whitfield-Gabrieli,
  • Anastasia Yendiki

Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26

Abstract

Read online

The Connectomes Related to Human Diseases (CRHD) initiative was developed with the Human Connectome Project (HCP) to provide high-resolution, open-access, multi-modal MRI data to better understand the neural correlates of human disease. Here, we present an introduction to a CRHD project, the Boston Adolescent Neuroimaging of Depression and Anxiety (BANDA) study, which is collecting multimodal neuroimaging, clinical, and neuropsychological data from 225 adolescents (ages 14–17), 150 of whom are expected to have a diagnosis of depression and/or anxiety. Our transdiagnostic recruitment approach samples the full spectrum of depressed/anxious symptoms and their comorbidity, consistent with NIMH Research Domain Criteria (RDoC). We focused on an age range that is critical for brain development and for the onset of mental illness. This project sought to harmonize imaging sequences, hardware, and functional tasks with other HCP studies, although some changes were made to canonical HCP methods to accommodate our study population and questions. We present a thorough overview of our imaging sequences, hardware, and scanning protocol. We detail similarities and differences between this study and other HCP studies. We evaluate structural-, diffusion-, and functional-image-quality measures that may be influenced by clinical factors (e.g., disorder, symptomatology). Signal-to-noise and motion estimates from the first 140 adolescents suggest minimal influence of clinical factors on image quality. We anticipate enrollment of an additional 85 participants, most of whom are expected to have a diagnosis of anxiety and/or depression. Clinical and neuropsychological data from the first 140 participants are currently freely available through the National Institute of Mental Health Data Archive (NDA).

Keywords