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The thalamus and its subnuclei: a gateway to obsessive-compulsive disorder

Weeland, Cees J; Kasprzak, Selina; de Joode, Niels T; et al; Brem, Silvia; Walitza, Susanne (2021). The thalamus and its subnuclei: a gateway to obsessive-compulsive disorder. medRxiv 21262530, Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory.

Abstract

Objective Higher thalamic volume has been found in children with obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and children with clinical-level symptoms within the general population. Particular thalamic subregions may drive these differences. The ENIGMA-OCD working group conducted mega- and meta-analyses to study thalamic subregional volume in OCD across the lifespan.

Method Structural T1-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans from 2,649 OCD patients and 2,774 healthy controls across 29 sites (50 datasets) were processed using the FreeSurfer built-in ThalamicNuclei pipeline to extract five thalamic subregions. Volume measures were harmonized for site effects using ComBat before running separate multiple linear regression models for children, adolescents, and adults to estimate volumetric group differences. All analyses were preregistered (https://osf.io/73dvy) and adjusted for age, sex and intracranial volume.

Results Unmedicated pediatric OCD patients (< 12 years) had larger lateral (d = 0.46), pulvinar (d = 0.33), ventral (d = 0.35) and whole thalamus (d = 0.40) volumes at unadjusted p-values <0.05. Adolescent patients showed no volumetric differences. Adult OCD patients compared with controls had smaller volumes across all subregions (anterior, lateral, pulvinar, medial, and ventral) and smaller whole thalamic volume (d = -0.15 to -0.07) after multiple comparisons correction, mostly driven by medicated patients and associated with symptom severity. The anterior thalamus was also significantly smaller in patients after adjusting for thalamus size.

Conclusion Our results suggest that OCD-related thalamic volume differences are global and not driven by particular subregions and that the direction of effects are driven by both age and medication status.

Additional indexing

Contributors:the ENIGMA-OCD Working Group
Item Type:Working Paper
Communities & Collections:04 Faculty of Medicine > Psychiatric University Hospital Zurich > Child and Adolescent Psychiatry
04 Faculty of Medicine > Neuroscience Center Zurich
Dewey Decimal Classification:610 Medicine & health
Language:English
Date:13 September 2021
Deposited On:10 Feb 2022 07:34
Last Modified:26 Mar 2025 13:25
Series Name:medRxiv
ISSN:0959-535X
OA Status:Green
Free access at:Publisher DOI. An embargo period may apply.
Publisher DOI:https://doi.org/10.1101/2021.09.06.21262530
Related URLs:https://www.zora.uzh.ch/id/eprint/217363/
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