No changes from the parent grant requested ABSTRACT. Bipolar Spectrum Disorders (BPSD) affect up to 4.5% of Americans, are the 4th disability worldwide, with onset peaking in early adulthood. Yet, it is very difficult to identify young adults at risk for BPSD, as there are no objective biomarkers of BPSD risk. Identifying these biomarkers can be facilitated by elucidating neural biomarkers of behaviors that predispose to key symptoms of BPSD: hypomania and mania. While emotional dysregulation characterizes BPSD, it also characterizes, and predisposes to, anxiety, depression, and anxiety, affective and personality disorders. Impulsive sensation seeking (ISS) comprises the component traits impulsivity and sensation seeking. High trait ISS characterizes BPSD, and predisposes to hypomania and mania in young adults. Thus, high trait ISS predisposes to hypo/mania, and emotional dysregulation, to anxiety and depression. The combination of both may ultimately confer risk for BPSD. In the first 4 years of R01MH100041, examining neural biomarkers of dimensions of psychopathology and 1-year outcome neural predictors in transdiagnostically-recruited young adults, we show (in n=100) a positive association between trait ISS and activity in reward circuitry: left ventrolateral prefrontal cortex (vlPFC) and ventral striatum (VS) during uncertain reward expectancy (RE). Greater left vlPFC and VS activity to uncertain RE is also shown by BPSD vs healthy adults. In MH100041, greater left vlPFC-parietal cortical functional connectivity (FC) to uncertain RE is associated with greater mania severity 6 months post scan; and greater left VS-left vlPFC resting state FC, with higher trait ISS. By contrast, greater amygdala activity, and lower amygdala-dorsal/rostral anterior cingulate cortical (dACC/rACC) FC, during emotion processing and regulation are associated with greater emotional dysregulation, anxiety and depression, and risk for anxiety, affective and personality disorders. Elevated reward circuitry activity and FC to uncertain RE and rest are thus promising neural biomarkers of hypo/mania risk, and, with the above amygdala-ACC abnormalities, may predispose to BPSD. We propose a renewal of MH100041 to: 1. Replicate and extend our neural biomarker findings in a new cohort of 180 young adults (18-30 years; recruited transdiagnostically; no BPSD); 2. Determine if these neural biomarkers are present in a new group of 60 age- and gender-ratio-matched adults with BPSD (30 bipolar disorder I, 30 bipolar disorder II, prototypical types of BPSD; remitted to avoid confounds of high severity symptoms; unmedicated/ specific medications); 3. Identify across original and new non-BPSD cohorts neural biomarkers of trait ISS and emotional dysregulation that predict worsening hypo/mania vs. worsening anxiety and depression over extended (2 years') follow up, and explore which neural biomarkers predispose to BPSD vs. other disorders. Identifying neural biomarkers of BPSD risk will help to better identify BPSD at-risk young adults, and provide neural targets for novel (e.g., neuromodulation) interventions to delay, or prevent, BPSD.

Public Health Relevance

Exposure to trauma is associated with heightened risk for negative affective symptoms; however, not all exposed individuals develop such symptoms and many adapt positively. Differentiating neural mechanisms underlying risk for versus resilience against development of negative affective symptoms is critical for identifying targets for novel treatments in young adulthood, a critical period when psychiatric symptoms typically emerge. We will prospectively study the impact of trauma exposure on neural reward circuitry function, and the relationship between trauma-associated neural circuitry and development of negative affective symptoms in young adults, in order to identify neural biomarkers for novel treatments impacted by trauma.

Agency
National Institute of Health (NIH)
Institute
National Institute of Mental Health (NIMH)
Type
Method to Extend Research in Time (MERIT) Award (R37)
Project #
3R37MH100041-06A1S1
Application #
9902925
Study Section
Program Officer
Morris, Sarah E
Project Start
2014-03-01
Project End
2020-12-31
Budget Start
2019-07-01
Budget End
2020-12-31
Support Year
6
Fiscal Year
2019
Total Cost
Indirect Cost
Name
University of Pittsburgh
Department
Psychiatry
Type
Schools of Medicine
DUNS #
004514360
City
Pittsburgh
State
PA
Country
United States
Zip Code
15260