Cortico-amygdalar connectivity and externalizing/internalizing behavior in children with neurodevelopmental disorders

Author:

Nakua Hajer,Hawco Colin,Forde Natalie J.,Jacobs Grace R.,Joseph Michael,Voineskos Aristotle N.,Wheeler Anne L.,Lai Meng-Chuan,Szatmari Peter,Kelley Elizabeth,Liu Xudong,Georgiades Stelios,Nicolson Rob,Schachar Russell,Crosbie Jennifer,Anagnostou Evdokia,Lerch Jason P.,Arnold Paul D.,Ameis Stephanie H.ORCID

Abstract

Abstract Background Externalizing and internalizing behaviors contribute to clinical impairment in children with neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). Although associations between externalizing or internalizing behaviors and cortico-amygdalar connectivity have been found in clinical and non-clinical pediatric samples, no previous study has examined whether similar shared associations are present across children with different NDDs. Methods Multi-modal neuroimaging and behavioral data from the Province of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Disorders (POND) Network were used. POND participants aged 6–18 years with a primary diagnosis of autism spectrum disorder (ASD), attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) or obsessive–compulsive disorder (OCD), as well as typically developing children (TDC) with T1-weighted, resting-state fMRI or diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) and parent-report Child Behavioral Checklist (CBCL) data available, were analyzed (total n = 346). Associations between externalizing or internalizing behavior and cortico-amygdalar structural and functional connectivity indices were examined using linear regressions, controlling for age, gender, and image-modality specific covariates. Behavior-by-diagnosis interaction effects were also examined. Results No significant linear associations (or diagnosis-by-behavior interaction effects) were found between CBCL-measured externalizing or internalizing behaviors and any of the connectivity indices examined. Post-hoc bootstrapping analyses indicated stability and reliability of these null results. Conclusions The current study provides evidence towards an absence of a shared linear relationship between internalizing or externalizing behaviors and cortico-amygdalar connectivity properties across a transdiagnostic sample of children with different primary NDD diagnoses and TDC. Different methodological approaches, including incorporation of multi-dimensional behavioral data (e.g., task-based fMRI) or clustering approaches may be needed to clarify complex brain-behavior relationships relevant to externalizing/internalizing behaviors in heterogeneous clinical NDD populations.

Funder

Ontario Brain Institute

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Discovery Fund

Ontario Graduate Scholarship

National Institute of Mental Health

Canadian Institutes of Health Research

Canada Foundation for Innovation

Centre for Addiction and Mental Health Foundation

Academic Scholars Award

Alberta Innovates Translational Health Chair in Child and Youth Mental Health

Brain Canada

Azrieli Foundation

Autism Speaks

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Histology,General Neuroscience,Anatomy

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