Brain Network Prediction of Outcomes for Family Caregiver Depression
Belise Swartwood, Felipe Jain, Benjamin Wade

TL;DR
This study explores how brain connectivity patterns can predict which family caregivers of dementia patients are most likely to benefit from depression treatment.
Contribution
The study introduces brain network connectivity as a potential biomarker for predicting treatment response in caregivers with depression.
Findings
Baseline brain connectivity patterns predicted depressive symptom improvement with high accuracy (R²=0.71).
Key networks like the default mode and somatosensory networks were significantly associated with treatment outcomes.
Findings suggest brain connectivity could help personalize depression treatment for caregivers.
Abstract
Alzheimer’s disease and related dementias affect over seven million Americans. Family members who provide care and assistance to their relatives often experience psychological burden and emotional distress, including elevated rates of depression. Caregiver response to depression treatment is highly variable, resulting in delays and inefficacious interventions for many, but there are no validated biomarkers to guide therapy. Overall brain function and depression treatment response is thought to be determined in part by the strength of large-scale brain connectivity networks. Resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) can estimate these connectivity strengths. In a pilot study, we examined whether baseline connectivity could predict depressive symptom improvement following Mentalizing Imagery Therapy (MIT) or control conditions in family caregivers of people living with…
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Taxonomy
TopicsFunctional Brain Connectivity Studies · Mental Health Research Topics · Digital Mental Health Interventions
