Frontostriatal functional connectivity correlates with repetitive behaviour across autism spectrum disorder and obsessive-compulsive disorder
Akkermans, Sophie E A; Rheinheimer, Nicole; Bruchhage, Muriel M K; Durston, Sarah; Brandeis, Daniel; Banaschewski, Tobias; Boecker-Schlier, Regina; Wolf, Isabella; Williams, Steven C R; Buitelaar, Jan K; van Rooij, Daan; Oldehinkel, Marianne; TACTICS Consortium
(2019) Psychological Medicine, volume 49, issue 13, pp. 2247 - 2255
(Article)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) and obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) are neurodevelopmental disorders with considerable overlap in terms of their defining symptoms of compulsivity/repetitive behaviour. Little is known about the extent to which ASD and OCD have common versus distinct neural correlates of compulsivity. Previous research points to potentially common dysfunction
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in frontostriatal connectivity, but direct comparisons in one study are lacking. Here, we assessed frontostriatal resting-state functional connectivity in youth with ASD or OCD, and healthy controls. In addition, we applied a cross-disorder approach to examine whether repetitive behaviour across ASD and OCD has common neural substrates. METHODS: A sample of 78 children and adolescents aged 8-16 years was used (ASD n = 24; OCD n = 25; healthy controls n = 29), originating from the multicentre study COMPULS. We tested whether diagnostic group, repetitive behaviour (measured with the Repetitive Behavior Scale-Revised) or their interaction was associated with resting-state functional connectivity of striatal seed regions. RESULTS: No diagnosis-specific differences were detected. The cross-disorder analysis, on the other hand, showed that increased functional connectivity between the left nucleus accumbens (NAcc) and a cluster in the right premotor cortex/middle frontal gyrus was related to more severe symptoms of repetitive behaviour. CONCLUSIONS: We demonstrate the fruitfulness of applying a cross-disorder approach to investigate the neural underpinnings of compulsivity/repetitive behaviour, by revealing a shared alteration in functional connectivity in ASD and OCD. We argue that this alteration might reflect aberrant reward or motivational processing of the NAcc with excessive connectivity to the premotor cortex implementing learned action patterns.
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Keywords: Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), compulsivity, frontostriatal circuits, functional connectivity, functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI), nucleus accumbens, obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD), repetitive behaviour, resting state, striatum, transdiagnostic
ISSN: 0033-2917
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Note: Funding Information: This work was supported by the European Community's Seventh Framework Programme FP7/2007-2013 under grant number 278948 (TACTICS). This funding agency had no role in study design, data collection, interpretation or influence on writing. Publisher Copyright: © Cambridge University Press 2018.
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