Abstract

BackgroundObsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has a lifetime prevalence of 2–3% and is a leading cause of global disability. Brain circuit abnormalities in individuals with OCD have been identified, but important knowledge gaps remain. The goal of the new global initiative described in this paper is to identify robust and reproducible brain signatures of measurable behaviors and clinical symptoms that are common in individuals with OCD. A global approach was chosen to accelerate discovery, to increase rigor and transparency, and to ensure generalizability of results.MethodsWe will study 250 medication-free adults with OCD, 100 unaffected adult siblings of individuals with OCD, and 250 healthy control subjects at five expert research sites across five countries (Brazil, India, Netherlands, South Africa, and the U.S.). All participants will receive clinical evaluation, neurocognitive assessment, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The imaging will examine multiple brain circuits hypothesized to underlie OCD behaviors, focusing on morphometry (T1-weighted MRI), structural connectivity (Diffusion Tensor Imaging), and functional connectivity (resting-state fMRI). In addition to analyzing each imaging modality separately, we will also use multi-modal fusion with machine learning statistical methods in an attempt to derive imaging signatures that distinguish individuals with OCD from unaffected siblings and healthy controls (Aim #1). Then we will examine how these imaging signatures link to behavioral performance on neurocognitive tasks that probe these same circuits as well as to clinical profiles (Aim #2). Finally, we will explore how specific environmental features (childhood trauma, socioeconomic status, and religiosity) moderate these brain-behavior associations.DiscussionUsing harmonized methods for data collection and analysis, we will conduct the largest neurocognitive and multimodal-imaging study in medication-free subjects with OCD to date. By recruiting a large, ethno-culturally diverse sample, we will test whether there are robust biosignatures of core OCD features that transcend countries and cultures. If so, future studies can use these brain signatures to reveal trans-diagnostic disease dimensions, chart when these signatures arise during development, and identify treatments that target these circuit abnormalities directly. The long-term goal of this research is to change not only how we conceptualize OCD but also how we diagnose and treat it.

Highlights

  • Obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) has a lifetime prevalence of 2–3% and is a leading cause of global disability

  • Ethno-culturally diverse sample, we will test whether there are robust biosignatures of core OCD features that transcend countries and cultures

  • Our study is designed to address a key question in the field: can we identify reproducible biosignatures of psychopathology that will change how we conceptualize mental illness, develop a mechanistic understanding of how current treatments work, and provide robust new targets for treatment development? As reviewed above, OCD provides an excellent test of this question, and the study described above represents the first step

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Summary

Methods

Study design This project is an observational study that includes brain imaging and clinical and neurocognitive assessments, as described below. Clinical evaluations A standardized protocol will be used at all sites to clinically assess subjects in their respective language (i.e., Afrikaans, Dutch, English, Kannada, or Portuguese) This protocol will include the Common Data Elements required by NIMH as well as validated clinical measures that have been used around the globe and that tap different clinical profiles common in individuals with OCD. We followed established methods used in other multi-center MRI studies to reduce between-scanner effects [34, 134,135,136] These methods included: harmonization of scan sequence, brain coverage, and spatial resolution, as well as assessment of scan quality using two physical phantoms (i.e. National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) and Functional Biomedical Informatics Research Network (fBIRN) Agar). Any anomalies are reported back to the site for follow-up

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