Abstract

Depression is a highly prevalent condition with devastating personal and public health consequences that often first manifests during adolescence. Though extensively studied, the pathogenesis of depression remains poorly understood, and efforts to stratify risks and identify optimal interventions have proceeded slowly. A major impediment has been the reliance on an all-or-nothing categorical diagnostic scheme based solely on whether a patient endorses an arbitrary number of common symptoms for a sufficiently long period. This approach masks the well-documented heterogeneity of depression, a disorder that is highly variable in presentation, severity, and course between individuals and is frequently comorbid with other psychiatric conditions. In this targeted review, we outline the limitations of traditional diagnosis-based research and instead advocate an alternative approach centered around symptoms as unique dimensions of clinical dysfunction that span across disorders and more closely reflect underlying neurobiological abnormalities. In particular, we highlight anhedonia—the reduced ability to anticipate and experience pleasure—as a specific, quantifiable index of reward dysfunction and an ideal candidate for dimensional investigation. Anhedonia is a core symptom of depression but also a salient feature of numerous other conditions, and its severity varies widely within clinical and even healthy populations. Similarly, reward dysfunction is a hallmark of depression but is evident across many psychiatric conditions. Reward function is especially relevant in adolescence, a period characterized by exaggerated reward-seeking behaviors and rapid maturation of neural reward circuitry. We detail extensive work by our research group and others to investigate the neural and systemic factors contributing to reward dysfunction in youth, including our cumulative findings using multiple neuroimaging and immunological measures to study depressed adolescents but also trans-diagnostic cohorts with diverse psychiatric symptoms. We describe convergent evidence that reward dysfunction: (a) predicts worse clinical outcomes, (b) is associated with functional and chemical abnormalities within and beyond the neural reward circuitry, (c) is linked to elevated peripheral levels of inflammatory biomarkers, and (d) manifests early in the course of illness. Emphasis is placed on high-resolution neuroimaging techniques, comprehensive immunological assays, and data-driven analyses to fully capture and characterize the complex, interconnected nature of these systems and their contributions to adolescent reward dysfunction.

Highlights

  • Depression in children and adolescents is associated with significant distress, family burden, and functional impairment including academic failure, social dysfunction, and substance use [1]

  • In additional to clinical associations, we examined whether measures of neural reward function at baseline would predict future clinical outcomes in a subset of 22 depressed and 10 healthy adolescents with Reward Flanker Task (RFT) functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data

  • In an exploratory study of 11 adults with major depressive disorder and 10 healthy controls, we found that anhedonia, but not fatigue, was negatively correlated with occipital glutathione levels indexed by 1H proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) [178]

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Summary

Introduction

Depression in children and adolescents is associated with significant distress, family burden, and functional impairment including academic failure, social dysfunction, and substance use [1]. Pediatric depression significantly increases the risk of suicide, which ranks as the second leading cause of death between ages 10–34 years [2]. Recent epidemiological surveys indicate that up to 20% of adolescents experience at least one depressive episode before entering adulthood [3]. The prevalence of major depressive disorder rises sharply during adolescence, with 12-months positivity rates increasing from 2.7% at ages 8–15 years [4] to 8.2% by ages 12–17 years [5]. Adolescent depression is a strong predictor of depression in adulthood [7,8,9], which is ranked by the World Health Organization as the leading cause of years lived with disability [10]

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