Publication | Open Access
Integration of Brain and Behavior Measures for Identification of Data-Driven Groups Cutting Across Children with ASD, ADHD, or OCD
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Citations
41
References
2020
Year
Unknown Venue
Developmental Cognitive NeuroscienceLongitudinal NeuroimagingPsychologySocial SciencesNeurodiversityAdhdCortical ThicknessAutismBehavioral IssueNeurologyDevelopmental DisorderCognitive NeuroscienceNetwork NeuroscienceChild PsychologyBehavioral SciencesNeuropsychological FunctioningPsychiatryBrain StructureNeuroimagingQuality ControlBrain ImagingSystems NeuroscienceNeurodevelopmental DisordersNeuroimaging BiomarkersConnectomicsHuman NeuroscienceNeuroscienceBehavior MeasuresMutual InformationMedicineChild PsychiatryPsychopathology
Abstract Autism spectrum disorder (ASD), obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD) and attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) are clinically and biologically heterogeneous neurodevelopmental disorders (NDDs). The objective of the present study was to integrate brain imaging and behavioral measures to identify new brain-behavior subgroups cutting across these disorders. A subset of the data from the Province of Ontario Neurodevelopmental Disorder (POND) Network including participants with different NDDs (aged 6-16 years) that underwent cross-sectional T1-weighted and diffusion-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanning on the same 3T scanner, and behavioral/cognitive assessments was used. Similarity Network Fusion was applied to integrate cortical thickness, subcortical volume, white matter fractional anisotropy (FA), and behavioral measures in 176 children with ASD, ADHD or OCD with complete data that passed quality control. Normalized mutual information (NMI) was used to determine top contributing model features. Bootstrapping, out-of-model outcome measures and supervised machine learning were each used to examine stability and evaluate the new groups. Cortical thickness in socio-emotional and attention/executive networks and inattention symptoms comprised the top ten features driving participant similarity and differences between four transdiagnostic groups. Subcortical volumes (pallidum, nucleus accumbens, thalamus) were also different among groups, although white matter FA showed limited differences. Features driving participant similarity remained stable across resampling, and the new groups showed significantly different scores on everyday adaptive functioning. Our findings open the possibility of studying new data-driven groups that represent children with NDDs more similar to each other than others within their own diagnostic group. Such new groups can be evaluated longitudinally for prognostic utility and could be stratified for clinical trials targeted toward each group’s unique brain and behavioral profiles.
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