- A study of 273 people found that brain circuits associated with depression were different between people with traumatic brain injury and those without TBI.
- The study suggests depression after TBI may not be the same as depression related to other causes.
Newswise — A new study led by Shan Siddiqi, MD, from Brigham and Women’s Hospital, a founding member of the Mass General Brigham healthcare system, suggests that depression after traumatic brain injury (TBI) could be a clinically distinct disorder rather than traditional major depressive disorder, with implications for patient treatment. The findings are published in Science Translational Medicine.
“Our findings help explain how the physical trauma to specific brain circuits can lead to development of depression. If we’re right, it means that we should be treating depression after TBI like a distinct disease,” said corresponding author Shan Siddiqi, MD, of the Brigham’s Department of Psychiatry and Center for Brain Circuit Therapeutics. “Many clinicians have suspected that this is a clinically distinct disorder with a unique pattern of symptoms and unique treatment response, including poor response to conventional antidepressants – but until now, we didn’t have clear physiological evidence to prove this.”
Siddiqi collaborated with researchers from Washington University in St. Louis, Duke University School of Medicine, the University of Padua, and the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences on the study. The work started as a side project seven years ago when Siddiqi was motivated by a patient he shared with David Brody, MD, PhD, a co-author on the study and a neurologist at Uniformed Services University. The two started a small clinical trial that used personalized brain mapping to target brain stimulation as a treatment for TBI patients with depression. In the process, they noticed a specific pattern of abnormalities in these patients’ brain maps.
The current study included 273 adults with TBI, usually from sports injuries, military injuries, or car accidents. People in this group were compared to other groups who did not have a TBI or depression, people with depression without TBI, and people with posttraumatic stress disorder. Study participants went through a resting-state functional connectivity MRI, a brain scan that looks at how oxygen is moving in the brain. These scans gave information about oxygenation in up to 200,000 points in the brain at about 1,000 different points in time, leading to about 200 million data points in each person. Based on this information, a machine learning algorithm was used to generate an individualized map of each person’s brain.
The location of the brain circuit involved in depression was the same among people with TBI as people without TBI, but the nature of the abnormalities was different. Connectivity in this circuit was decreased in depression without TBI and was increased in TBI-associated depression. This implies that TBI-associated depression may be a different disease process, leading the study authors to propose a new name: “TBI affective syndrome.”
“I've always suspected it isn't the same as regular major depressive disorder or other mental health conditions that are not related to traumatic brain injury,” said Brody. “There's still a lot we don't understand, but we're starting to make progress.”
One limitation of the trial is that with so much data, the researchers were not able to do detailed assessments of each patient beyond brain mapping. As a future step, investigators would like to assess participants’ behavior in a more sophisticated way and potentially define different kinds of TBI-associated neuropsychiatric syndromes.
Siddiqi and Brody are also using this approach to develop personalized treatments. Originally, they set out to design a new treatment in which they used this brain mapping technology to target a specific brain region for people with TBI and depression, using transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). They enrolled 15 people in the pilot and saw success with the treatment. Since then, they have received funding to replicate the study in a multicenter military trial.
“We hope our discovery guides a precision medicine approach to managing depression and mild TBI, and perhaps even intervene in neuro-vulnerable trauma survivors before the onset of chronic symptoms,” said Rajendra Morey, MD, a professor of psychiatry at Duke University School of Medicine, and co-author on the study.
Disclosures: Dr. Siddiqi is a scientific consultant for Magnus Medical and a clinical consultant for Acacia Mental Health, Kaizen Brain Center, and Boston Precision Neurotherapeutics. He has received
investigator-initiated research funding independently from Neuronetics and BrainsWay. He has served as a speaker for BrainsWay (branded) and PsychU.org (unbranded, sponsored by Otsuka). He owns stock
in BrainsWay (publicly traded) and Magnus Medical (not publicly traded). DLB has served as a consultant for Pfizer Inc, Intellectual Ventures, Signum Nutralogix, Kypha Inc, Sage Therapeutics, iPerian Inc, Navigant, Avid Radiopharmaceuticals (Eli Lilly & Co), the St Louis County Public Defender, the United States Attorney’s Office, the St Louis County Medical Examiner, GLG, Stemedica, Luna Innovations, and QualWorld. DLB holds equity in the company Inner Cosmos. DLB receives royalties from sales of Concussion Care Manual (Oxford University Press) and an honorarium from Mary Ann Liebert Inc for services as Editor-in-Chief of Journal of Neurotrauma. No conflicts of interest with the presented work. DLB is an employee of the Department of Defense; the views expressed here do not reflect those of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Sciences, the US Department of Defense, or the US Government.
Funding: The study protocol was funded by the McDonnell Center for Systems Neuroscience (New Resource Proposal) and the Mallinckrodt Institute of Radiology (funding for scans). SHS received fellowship support from the Sidney R. Baer Foundation. SHS received salary support from the Center for Neuroscience and Regenerative Medicine at the Uniformed Services University for Health Sciences. SHS
is currently funded by the National Institute of Mental Health (K23MH121657 and R01MH113929), the Brain & Behavior Research Foundation, and the Baszucki Family Foundation. DLB was an employee of
Washington University at the time the study was conducted and is now an employee of the Uniformed Services University of the Health Science, Department of Defense.
Paper cited: Siddiqi, S.H. et al. “Precision functional MRI mapping reveals distinct connectivity patterns for depression associated with traumatic brain injury” Science Translational Medicine DOI: 10.1126/scitranslmed.abn0441
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