Abstract

Anhedonia emerges during adolescence and is characteristic of severe mental illness (SMI). To understand how anhedonia emerges, changes with time, and relates with other symptoms, there is a need to understand patterns of this symptom's course reflecting change or stability-and associations with clinical symptoms and neural reward circuitry in adolescents at risk of SMI. In total, 113 adolescents at low or high familial risk of developing SMI completed clinical measures at up to five time points across 2 years and functional magnetic resonance imaging scanning during a guessing reward task at baseline. Growth curve analysis was used to determine the trajectory of anhedonia across 2 years, including different phases (consummatory and anticipatory) and their association with clinical features (risk status, average suicidal ideation, and average depression across time) and neural activation in response to rewards (ventral striatum and dorsal medial prefrontal cortex). The findings revealed anhedonia decreased across 2 years. Furthermore, lower depression severity was associated with decreases in anhedonia across 2 years. There were no interactions between neural reward activation and anhedonia slopes in predicting clinical features. Exploratory analyses examining latent classes revealed three trajectory classes of anhedonia across phases. While preliminary, in the low and decreasing consummatory anhedonia trajectory class, there was a positive association between neural activation of the right ventral striatum in response to rewards and depression. Certain patterns of anhedonia development could confer risk or resilience for specific types of psychopathologies. The results are preliminary but do highlight the complexity and heterogeneity in anhedonia development. (PsycInfo Database Record (c) 2024 APA, all rights reserved).

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