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Moderation of the Relationship Between Reward Expectancy and Prediction Error-Related Ventral Striatal Reactivity by Anhedonia in Unmedicated Major Depressive Disorder: Findings From the EMBARC Study.

Authors :
Greenberg, Tsafrir
Chase, Henry W
Almeida, Jorge R
Stiffler, Richelle
Zevallos, Carlos R
Aslam, Haris A
Deckersbach, Thilo
Weyandt, Sarah
Cooper, Crystal
Toups, Marisa
Carmody, Thomas
Kurian, Benji
Peltier, Scott
Adams, Phillip
McInnis, Melvin G
Oquendo, Maria A
McGrath, Patrick J
Fava, Maurizio
Weissman, Myrna
Parsey, Ramin
Source :
American Journal of Psychiatry; 2015 Sep 1, Vol. 172 Issue 9, p881-891, 11p
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

<bold>Objective: </bold>Anhedonia, disrupted reward processing, is a core symptom of major depressive disorder. Recent findings demonstrate altered reward-related ventral striatal reactivity in depressed individuals, but the extent to which this is specific to anhedonia remains poorly understood. The authors examined the effect of anhedonia on reward expectancy (expected outcome value) and prediction error- (discrepancy between expected and actual outcome) related ventral striatal reactivity, as well as the relationship between these measures.<bold>Method: </bold>A total of 148 unmedicated individuals with major depressive disorder and 31 healthy comparison individuals recruited for the multisite EMBARC (Establishing Moderators and Biosignatures of Antidepressant Response in Clinical Care) study underwent functional MRI during a well-validated reward task. Region of interest and whole-brain data were examined in the first- (N=78) and second- (N=70) recruited cohorts, as well as the total sample, of depressed individuals, and in healthy individuals.<bold>Results: </bold>Healthy, but not depressed, individuals showed a significant inverse relationship between reward expectancy and prediction error-related right ventral striatal reactivity. Across all participants, and in depressed individuals only, greater anhedonia severity was associated with a reduced reward expectancy-prediction error inverse relationship, even after controlling for other symptoms.<bold>Conclusions: </bold>The normal reward expectancy and prediction error-related ventral striatal reactivity inverse relationship concords with conditioning models, predicting a shift in ventral striatal responding from reward outcomes to reward cues. This study shows, for the first time, an absence of this relationship in two cohorts of unmedicated depressed individuals and a moderation of this relationship by anhedonia, suggesting reduced reward-contingency learning with greater anhedonia. These findings help elucidate neural mechanisms of anhedonia, as a step toward identifying potential biosignatures of treatment response. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0002953X
Volume :
172
Issue :
9
Database :
Complementary Index
Journal :
American Journal of Psychiatry
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
109639235
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1176/appi.ajp.2015.14050594