Abstract

BackgroundChildhood trauma is a significant risk factor for adult psychopathology. Previous investigations have implicated childhood trauma–related structural changes in anterior cingulate, dorsolateral prefrontal and orbitofrontal cortex, and hippocampus. Using a large transdiagnostic community sample, the goal of this investigation was to differentially associate regional gray matter (GM) volume with childhood trauma severity specifically, distinct from adult psychopathology. MethodsA total of 577 non–treatment-seeking adults (n = 207 men) completed diagnostic, childhood trauma, and structural magnetic resonance imaging assessments with regional GM volume estimated using FreeSurfer. Elastic net analysis was conducted in a nested cross-validation framework, with GM volumes, adult psychopathology, age, education, sex, and magnetic resonance imaging coil type as potential predictors for childhood trauma severity. ResultsElastic net identified age, education, sex, medical condition, adult psychopathology, and 13 GM regions as predictors of childhood trauma severity. GM regions identified included right caudate; left pallidum; bilateral insula and cingulate sulcus; left superior, inferior, and orbital frontal regions; and regions within temporal and parietal lobes and cerebellum. ConclusionsResults from this large, transdiagnostic sample implicate GM volume in regions central to current neurobiological theories of trauma (e.g., prefrontal cortex) as well as additional regions involved in reward, interoceptive, attentional, and sensory processing (e.g., striatal, insula, and parietal/occipital cortices). Future longitudinal studies examining the functional impact of structural changes in this broader network of regions are needed to clarify the role each may play in longer-term outcomes following trauma.

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