Abstract

Trauma elicits various adaptive and maladaptive responses among all exposed people. There may be distinctively different patterns of adaptation/maladaptation or types according to neurobiological predisposition. The present study aims to dissect the heterogeneity of posttraumatic conditions in order to identify clinically meaningful subtypes in recently traumatized individuals and evaluate their neurobiological correlates and long-term prognosis. We implemented a data-driven classification approach in both discovery (n = 480) and replication (n = 220) datasets of trauma-exposed and trauma-unexposed individuals based on the clinical data across a wide range of assessments. Subtype-specific patterns of functional connectivity in higher-order cortical networks, longitudinal clinical outcomes, and changes in functional connectivity were also evaluated. We identified four distinct and replicable subtypes for trauma-exposed individuals according to posttraumatic stress symptoms. Each subtype was distinct in clinical characteristics, brain functional organization, and long-term trajectories for posttraumatic symptoms. These findings help enhance current understanding of mechanisms underlying the human-specific heterogeneous responses to trauma. Furthermore, this study contributes data towards the development of improved interventions, including targeting of subtype-specific characteristics, for trauma-exposed individuals and those with PTSD.

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