Abstract

BackgroundThe absence of biomarkers for predicting treatment response in adolescent mood disorder calls for further research. The vermis, a component of the cerebellum, is involved in mood disorder pathophysiology and relates to clinical symptoms and treatment outcomes. We investigated vermis functional connectivity (FC) as an early marker for treatment response identification. MethodOne hundred thirty-two adolescents with mood disorders including major depressive disorder or bipolar disorder, were recruited, who were experiencing a major depressive episode. All adolescents underwent baseline and 2-week treatment resting-state MRI scans. Hamilton Rating Scale for Depression (HAMD) assessments were completed to assess the severity of symptoms. Patients were divided into treatment-responsive (≥50 % HAMD reduction, n = 75) and treatment-unresponsive subgroups (n = 57). Vermis FCs were compared between subgroups at baseline. And we compared the pre- and post-treatment FC differences within subgroups. ResultHigher vermis-left temporal lobe FC in treatment-responsive group compared to treatment-unresponsive group at baseline. The FC value showed positive prognosis for the efficacy, with the area under the curve (AUC) of 0.760 (95 % confidence interval: 0.678–0.843, p < 0.001), suggesting higher vermis-temporal FC is benefit to improve treatment-response.Furthermore, post-treatment analysis showed significant increases in the vermis-right frontal lobe FC values between in all patients, suggesting that vermis-frontal FCs were independent of treatment-outcome. LimitationSample size was relatively small, which may limit the generalizability of our results. ConclusionOur study revealed that the FC between the vermis and the cortex is not only associated with symptom alleviation but also predictive of treatment outcomes.

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