Author:
Schinz David,Schmitz-Koep Benita,Tahedl Marlene,Teckenberg Timo,Schultz Vivian,Schulz Julia,Zimmer Claus,Sorg Christian,Gaser Christian,Hedderich Dennis M.
Abstract
BackgroundCocaine use disorder (CUD) is a global health issue with severe behavioral and cognitive sequelae. While previous evidence suggests a variety of structural and age-related brain changes in CUD, the impact on both, cortical thickness and brain age measures remains unclear.MethodsDerived from a publicly available data set (SUDMEX_CONN), 74 CUD patients and 62 matched healthy controls underwent brain MRI and behavioral-clinical assessment. We determined cortical thickness by surface-based morphometry using CAT12 and Brain Age Gap Estimate (BrainAGE) via relevance vector regression. Associations between structural brain changes and behavioral-clinical variables of patients with CUD were investigated by correlation analyses.ResultsWe found significantly lower cortical thickness in bilateral prefrontal cortices, posterior cingulate cortices, and the temporoparietal junction and significantly increased BrainAGE in patients with CUD [mean (SD) = 1.97 (±3.53)] compared to healthy controls (p < 0.001, Cohen’s d = 0.58). Increased BrainAGE was associated with longer cocaine abuse duration.ConclusionResults demonstrate structural brain abnormalities in CUD, particularly lower cortical thickness in association cortices and dose-dependent, increased brain age.
Subject
Psychiatry and Mental health