Association of brain white matter microstructure with cognitive performance in major depressive disorder and healthy controls: a diffusion-tensor imaging study

Meinert, S.; Nowack, N.; Grotegerd, D.; Repple, J.; Winter, N.; Abheiden, I.; Enneking, V.; Lemke, H.; Waltemate, L.; Sein, F.; Brosch, K.; Schmitt, S.; Meller, T.; Pfarr, J.K.; Ringwald, K.; Steinstraeter, O.; Gruber, M.; Nenadic, I.; Krug, A.; Leehr, E.; Hahn, T.; Thiel, K.; Dohm, K.; Winter, A.; Opel, N.; Schubotz, R.I.; Kircher, T.; Dannlowski, U.;

Research article (journal) | Peer reviewed

Abstract

Cognitive deficits are central attendant symptoms of major depressive disorder (MDD) with a crucial impact in patients’ everyday life. Thus, it is of particular clinical importance to understand their pathophysiology. The aim of this study was to investigate a possible relationship between brain structure and cognitive performance in MDD patients in a well-characterized sample. N = 1007 participants (NMDD = 482, healthy controls (HC): NHC = 525) were selected from the FOR2107 cohort for this diffusion-tensor imaging study employing tract-based spatial statistics. We conducted a principal component analysis (PCA) to reduce neuropsychological test results, and to discover underlying factors of cognitive performance in MDD patients. We tested the association between fractional anisotropy (FA) and diagnosis (MDD vs. HC) and cognitive performance factors. The PCA yielded a single general cognitive performance factor that differed significantly between MDD patients and HC (P < 0.001). We found a significant main effect of the general cognitive performance factor in FA (Ptfce-FWE = 0.002) in a large bilateral cluster consisting of widespread frontotemporal-association fibers. In MDD patients this effect was independent of medication intake, the presence of comorbid diagnoses, the number of previous hospitalizations, and depressive symptomatology. This study provides robust evidence that white matter disturbances and cognitive performance seem to be associated. This association was independent of diagnosis, though MDD patients show more pronounced deficits and lower FA values in the global white matter fiber structure. This suggests a more general, rather than the depression-specific neurological basis for cognitive deficits.

Details about the publication

JournalMolecular Psychiatry
Volume27, 1103–1110
StatusPublished
Release year2021 (28/09/2021)
DOI10.1038/s41380-021-01330-8
KeywordsCognitive deficits; major depressive disorder (MDD); relationship between brain structure and cognitive performance; frontotemporal-association fibers; white matter disturbances and cognitive performance seem to be associated;

Authors from the University of Münster

Dannlowski, Udo
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Grotegerd, Dominik
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Gruber, Marius
FB 07 - Psychologie und Sportwissenschaft: Betriebseinheit Psychologie
Hahn, Tim
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Leehr, Elisabeth Johanna
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Lemke, Hannah Luisa
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Meinert, Susanne Leonie
Institute of Translational Neuroscience
Mönchhalfen, Verena
Psychotherapie-Ambulanz
Repple, Jonathan
Institute of Translational Psychiatry
Schubotz, Ricarda
Professorship for Biological Psychology (Prof. Schubotz)
Waltemate, Lena
Psychotherapie-Ambulanz
Winter, Alexandra
Institute of Translational Psychiatry