Abstract

While the centrality of withdrawal in the diagnosis of addiction has been decreasing with each successive edition of the Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, psychometric and neurobiological evidence provides withdrawal a central role in the development and maintenance of addiction. The current study offers insight into these conflicting positions by using secondary analyses to assess how a history of DSM-assessed withdrawal influences the magnitude of bias in neural reactivity to drug- and/or food-related reward cues. To this end, we separated an existing sample of cocaine-dependent participants (Denomme et al., 2018) into those with (WD) and without (N-WD) a history of withdrawal, and compared food- and drug-cue reactivity between these groups, and to a non-dependent control group (ND). Analyses indicated that biases in neural reactivity towards drug- versus food-related cues only occurred among the WD participants (within: left dorsomedial prefrontal cortex, left anterior cingulate cortex, left orbitofrontal cortex, left caudate nucleus, and right ventrolateral prefrontal cortex). Thus, withdrawal status may be an important factor to consider when interpreting dependence-related biases in neural reactivity following reward-related cues. Interestingly, while N-WD participants did not show these broad biases in neural reactivity, the magnitude of their bias correlated positively with years of lifetime substance use history, particularly when psychopathic traits were low. It may be that for individuals who’s addiction has not yet reached a compulsive state (see Wise and Koob, 2014), the magnitude of their drug > food bias could serve as a valuable biomarker of addiction severity.

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