Mapping cortical and subcortical asymmetries in substance dependence: Findings from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group

Open Access
Authors
  • Z. Cao
  • J. Ottino-Gonzalez
  • R.B. Cupertino
  • N. Schwab
  • C. Hoke
  • O. Catherine
  • J. Cousijn ORCID logo
  • A. Dagher
  • J.J. Foxe
  • A.E. Goudriaan
  • R. Hester
  • K. Hutchison
  • C.-S.R. Li
  • E.D. London
  • V. Lorenzetti
  • M. Luijten
  • R. Martin-Santos
  • R. Momenan
  • M.P. Paulus
  • L. Schmaal
  • R. Sinha
  • Z. Sjoerds
  • N. Solowij
  • D.J. Stein
  • E.A. Stein
  • A. Uhlmann
  • R.J. van Holst
  • D.J. Veltman
  • R.W. Wiers ORCID logo
  • M. Yücel
  • S. Zhang
  • N. Jahanshad
  • P.M. Thompson
  • P. Conrod
  • S. Mackey
  • H. Garavan
Publication date 09-2021
Journal Addiction Biology
Article number e13010
Volume | Issue number 26 | 5
Number of pages 9
Organisations
  • Faculty of Social and Behavioural Sciences (FMG) - Psychology Research Institute (PsyRes)
Abstract

Brain asymmetry reflects left-right hemispheric differentiation, which is a quantitative brain phenotype that develops with age and can vary with psychiatric diagnoses. Previous studies have shown that substance dependence is associated with altered brain structure and function. However, it is unknown whether structural brain asymmetries are different in individuals with substance dependence compared with nondependent participants. Here, a mega-analysis was performed using a collection of 22 structural brain MRI datasets from the ENIGMA Addiction Working Group. Structural asymmetries of cortical and subcortical regions were compared between individuals who were dependent on alcohol, nicotine, cocaine, methamphetamine, or cannabis (n = 1,796) and nondependent participants (n = 996). Substance-general and substance-specific effects on structural asymmetry were examined using separate models. We found that substance dependence was significantly associated with differences in volume asymmetry of the nucleus accumbens (NAcc; less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.15). This effect was driven by differences from controls in individuals with alcohol dependence (less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.10) and nicotine dependence (less rightward; Cohen's d = 0.11). These findings suggest that disrupted structural asymmetry in the NAcc may be a characteristic of substance dependence.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary file
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1111/adb.13010
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