The impact of age on olfactory alcohol cue‐reactivity: A functional magnetic resonance imaging study in adolescent and adult male drinkers

Author:

Cousijn Janna12ORCID,Mies Gabry23,Runia Nora45ORCID,Derksen Maik46,Willuhn Ingo46ORCID,Lesscher Heidi7ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Neuroscience of Addiction (NofA) Lab, Department of Psychology, Education and Child Studies Erasmus University Rotterdam Rotterdam The Netherlands

2. Department of Psychology University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

3. Karakter Child and Adolescent Psychiatry Center Nijmegen The Netherlands

4. Department of Psychiatry Amsterdam University Medical Centers University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

5. Amsterdam Brain and Cognition University of Amsterdam Amsterdam The Netherlands

6. Netherlands Institute for Neuroscience Royal Netherlands Academy of Arts and Sciences Amsterdam The Netherlands

7. Unit Animals in Science and Society, Division of Behavioural Neuroscience, Department of Population Health Sciences Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Utrecht University Utrecht The Netherlands

Abstract

AbstractBackgroundAdolescence is marked not only by rapid surges in the prevalence of alcohol use disorders (AUDs) but also by remarkable recovery rates, as most adolescent‐onset AUDs naturally resolve over time. Little is known about the differential vulnerability of adolescents and adults. Therefore, this study aimed to unravel the moderating role of age by comparing neural alcohol cue‐reactivity, an important AUD biomarker, between low‐to‐high beer‐drinking adolescent (n = 50, 16 to 18 years), and adult (n = 51, 30 to 35 years) males matched on drinking severity.MethodsAssociations between beer odor‐induced brain activity and AUD diagnosis, severity of alcohol use‐related problems, recent alcohol use, binge‐drinking frequency, and task‐induced craving were investigated across and between age groups in regions of interest thought to be central in alcohol cue‐reactivity: the medial prefrontal cortex, anterior cingulate cortex, and striatal subregions (nucleus accumbens and caudate putamen). These analyses were complemented by exploratory whole‐brain analyses.ResultsPre‐task beer craving increased pre‐to‐post task in adolescents only. Individual differences in alcohol use, binge drinking, and craving did not relate to beer odor‐induced activity. Although region‐of‐interest analyses did not reach significance, whole‐brain analyses showed that adolescents with AUD, compared with adolescents without AUD and adults with AUD, had higher beer odor‐induced activity in a large mesocorticolimbic cluster encompassing the right caudate, nucleus accumbens, orbitofrontal cortex, and the olfactory sulcus. Activity in the right caudate and putamen was positively associated with the severity of alcohol use‐related problems in adolescents but negatively associated in adults.ConclusionThese findings suggest a differential role of alcohol cue‐reactivity in adolescents compared with adults with AUD and highlight the need for further studies investigating the role of age in the fundamental processes underlying the development of and recovery from of AUD.

Funder

H2020 European Research Council

Publisher

Wiley

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