Transdiagnostic alterations in white matter microstructure associated with suicidal thoughts and behaviours in the ENIGMA Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviours consortium
Laura S. van Velzen, Lejla Colic, Zuriel Ceja, Maria R. Dauvermann, Luca M. Villa, Hannah S. Savage, Yara J. Toenders, Niousha Dehestani, Alyssa H. Zhu, Adrian I. Campos, Lauren E. Salminen, Martin Alda, Ingrid Agartz, Nina Alexander, Rosa Ayesa-Arriola, Elizabeth D. Ballard

TL;DR
This study finds subtle changes in brain white matter linked to suicidal thoughts and behaviors across many participants.
Contribution
Identifies transdiagnostic white matter alterations in individuals with suicidal behaviors, beyond psychiatric diagnosis effects.
Findings
Lower fractional anisotropy in specific white matter regions among those with a history of suicide attempts.
Higher axial diffusivity in the cingulum associated with recent suicidal ideation.
Effect sizes were small but statistically significant across multiple white matter tracts.
Abstract
Previous studies have suggested that alterations in white matter (WM) microstructure are implicated in suicidal thoughts and behaviours (STBs). However, findings of diffusion tensor imaging (DTI) studies have been inconsistent. In this large-scale mega-analysis conducted by the ENIGMA Suicidal Thoughts and Behaviours (ENIGMA-STB) consortium, we examined WM alterations associated with STBs. Data processing was standardised across sites, and resulting WM microstructure measures (fractional anisotropy (FA), axial diffusivity (AD), mean diffusivity and radial diffusivity) for 24 WM tracts and one global measure were pooled across 40 cohorts. We compared these measures among individuals with a psychiatric diagnosis and lifetime history of suicide attempt (n = 652; mean age = 35.4 ± 14.7; female = 71.8%), individuals with a psychiatric diagnosis but no STB (i.e., clinical controls; n = 1871;…
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Taxonomy
TopicsAdvanced Neuroimaging Techniques and Applications · Traumatic Brain Injury Research · Suicide and Self-Harm Studies
