Abstract

Obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms are common in the general population, but it is unclear whether subclinical OC symptoms and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are part of a neuroanatomical continuum. The goal of this study was to investigate the relation between OC symptoms and subcortical and cortical morphology in a population-based sample of children. The study included 2,551 participants, aged 9-12 years, from the population-based Generation R Study. OC symptoms were measured using the 7-item caregiver-rated Short Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder Screener (SOCS). Structural (3T) magnetic resonance imaging scans were processed using FreeSurfer to study the thalamus and other subcortical volumes, intracranial volume, vertexwise cortical thickness, and surface area. We used linear regression models to investigate the association between OC symptoms and brain morphology. Emulating case-control studies from the literature, we compared children scoring above the clinical cutoff of the SOCS (probable OCD cases, n= 164) with matched children without symptoms. Children with probable OCD had larger thalami compared with the control group (d 0.16, p= .044). Vertexwise analysis showed a positive association between OC symptoms and thickness of the right inferior parietal cortex, which disappeared after adjusting for total behavioral problems. SOCS scores correlated negatively with intracranial volume (B=-2444, p= .038). Children with probable OCD showed thalamus alterations similar to those previously reported in unmedicated children with OCD. OC symptoms showed a stronger association with total intracranial volume than regional brain measures. Longitudinal studies are needed to further elucidate similarities and distinctions between neural correlates of subclinical and clinical OC symptoms.

Highlights

  • We investigated the relation between OC symptoms and brain morphology in 2,551 school-aged children from a population-based study

  • We found an association between OC symptoms and a thicker right inferior parietal cortex, which did not persist after adjusting for overall behavioral problems

  • The larger thalamus in participants with probable obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) fits with the recent ENIGMA-OCD meta-analysis findings in unmedicated children and with earlier work.[7,9,29]

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Summary

Objective

Obsessive-compulsive (OC) symptoms are common in the general population, but it is unclear whether subclinical OC symptoms and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are part of a neuroanatomical continuum. The goal of this study was to investigate the relation between OC symptoms and subcortical and cortical morphology in a population-based sample of children. Investigating neurobiological alterations associated with OC symptoms might provide brain markers to make such predictions To this aim, we investigated the morphometric correlates of OC symptoms in the general population of school-aged children using both a dimensional and a case-control approach and whether these correlates align with previous findings of clinical OCD in children. We present a larger study sample (N 1⁄4 2,551) from the population-based Generation R Study to assess whether OC symptoms on a continuous scale are associated with changes in the volume of the thalamus and other subcortical regions, cortical thickness, cortical surface area, and intracranial volume (ICV). Based on previous literature in pediatric OCD, we hypothesized that OC symptoms in the general pediatric population are associated with thinner parietal cortex and larger thalamus

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