Abstract

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a prevailing chronic mental disorder with lifetime recurring episodes. Recurrent depression (RD) has been reported to be associated with greater severity of depression, higher relapse rate and prominent functioning impairments than first-episode depression (FED), suggesting the progressive nature of depression. However, there is still little evidence regarding brain functional connectome. In this study, 95 medication-free MDD patients (35 with FED and 60 with RD) and 111 matched healthy controls (HCs) underwent resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) scanning. After six months of treatment with paroxetine, 56 patients achieved clinical remission and finished their second scan. Network-based statistics analysis was used to explore the changes in functional connectivity. The results revealed that, compared with HCs, patients with FED exhibited hypoconnectivity in the somatomotor, default mode and dorsal attention networks, and RD exhibited hyperconnectivity in the somatomotor, salience, executive control, default mode and dorsal attention networks, as well as within and between salience and executive control networks. Moreover, the disrupted components in patients with current MDD did not change significantly when the patients achieved remission after treatment, and sub-hyperconnectivity and sub-hypoconnectivity were still found in those with remitted RD. Additionally, the hypoconnectivity in FED and hyperconnectivity in RD were associated with the number of episodes and total illness duration. This study provides initial evidence supporting that impairment of intrinsic functional connectivity across the course of depression is a progressive process.

Highlights

  • Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a clinical progressive mental disorder in nature

  • Demographic and clinical characteristics The detailed demographic and clinical characteristics of the MDD (FED and Recurrent depression (RD)), remitted MDD (rMDD) and healthy controls (HCs) groups were presented in Supplementary Table S1

  • A disrupted component with hypoconnectivity was found in the first-episode depression (FED) group, compared to HCs

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Summary

Introduction

Major depressive disorder (MDD) is a clinical progressive mental disorder in nature. Many studies support that abnormal brain structural and functional alterations are the underlying pathophysiology of MDD9–11. Previous studies consistently reported the associations between brain structure alterations. Negative correlations were found between a greater number of prior depressive episodes and a reduction in the hippocampal and amygdala volume[12,13], as well as the thinning of medial prefrontal cortex (mPFC)[14]. It was found that illness duration was correlated with the volume reduction of hippocampus, putamen, insula and mPFC15–17. Only a small number of studies have examined the relationship between the course of illness and brain functional alterations prospectively to explain the progressive nature of depression

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