TY - JOUR
T1 - Structural Cerebellar and Lateral Frontoparietal Networks are altered in CUD
T2 - An SBM Analysis
AU - Lacomba-Arnau, Elena
AU - Martínez-Molina, Agustín
AU - Barrós-Loscertales, Alfonso
N1 - Funding
The publication is part of the project PID2021-127340NB- C21, funded by Ministerio de Ciencia e Innovación (MCIN/AEI/10.13039/501100011033/FEDER, EU); participation of EL-A was supported by a grant of the Agència de Gestió d’Ajuts Universitaris i de Recerca de la Generalitat de Catalunya (2023 FI-3 00107) and a grant of Universidad Autónoma de Madrid (CA5/RSUE/2022- 00133) to AMM.
© 2025 The Author(s). Addiction Biology published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd on behalf of Society for the Study of Addiction.
PY - 2025/3
Y1 - 2025/3
N2 - Repetitive drug use results in enduring structural and functional changes in the brain. Addiction research has consistently revealed significant modifications in key brain networks related to reward, habit, salience, executive function, memory and self-regulation. Techniques like Voxel-based Morphometry have highlighted large-scale structural differences in grey matter across distinct groups. Source-based Morphometry (SBM) takes this a step further by incorporating the Independent Component Analysis to detect shared patterns of grey matter variation, all without requiring prior selection of regions of interest. However, SBM has yet to be employed in the study of structural alteration patterns related to cocaine addiction. Therefore, we performed this analysis to explore alterations in structural covariance specific to cocaine addiction. Our study involved 40 individuals diagnosed with Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD) and 40 matched healthy controls. Participants with CUD completed clinical questionnaires assessing the severity of their dependence and other relevant clinical variables. Following the adjustment for age-related effects, we observed notable disparities between groups in two structural independent components, which we identified as the structural cerebellar network and the structural lateral frontoparietal network, which display opposing trends. Specifically, the individuals with CUD exhibited a heightened contribution to the cerebellar network but simultaneously demonstrated a reduced contribution to the lateral frontoparietal network compared to the healthy controls. These findings unveil distinctive covariance patterns of neuroregulation linked with cocaine addiction, which indicates an interruption in the typical structural development in an affected lateral frontoparietal network, while suggesting an extended pattern of neuroregulation within the cerebellar network in individuals with CUD.
AB - Repetitive drug use results in enduring structural and functional changes in the brain. Addiction research has consistently revealed significant modifications in key brain networks related to reward, habit, salience, executive function, memory and self-regulation. Techniques like Voxel-based Morphometry have highlighted large-scale structural differences in grey matter across distinct groups. Source-based Morphometry (SBM) takes this a step further by incorporating the Independent Component Analysis to detect shared patterns of grey matter variation, all without requiring prior selection of regions of interest. However, SBM has yet to be employed in the study of structural alteration patterns related to cocaine addiction. Therefore, we performed this analysis to explore alterations in structural covariance specific to cocaine addiction. Our study involved 40 individuals diagnosed with Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD) and 40 matched healthy controls. Participants with CUD completed clinical questionnaires assessing the severity of their dependence and other relevant clinical variables. Following the adjustment for age-related effects, we observed notable disparities between groups in two structural independent components, which we identified as the structural cerebellar network and the structural lateral frontoparietal network, which display opposing trends. Specifically, the individuals with CUD exhibited a heightened contribution to the cerebellar network but simultaneously demonstrated a reduced contribution to the lateral frontoparietal network compared to the healthy controls. These findings unveil distinctive covariance patterns of neuroregulation linked with cocaine addiction, which indicates an interruption in the typical structural development in an affected lateral frontoparietal network, while suggesting an extended pattern of neuroregulation within the cerebellar network in individuals with CUD.
KW - Humans
KW - Cocaine-Related Disorders/diagnostic imaging
KW - Male
KW - Female
KW - Adult
KW - Magnetic Resonance Imaging
KW - Cerebellum/diagnostic imaging
KW - Parietal Lobe/diagnostic imaging
KW - Gray Matter/diagnostic imaging
KW - Frontal Lobe/diagnostic imaging
KW - Middle Aged
KW - Case-Control Studies
KW - Nerve Net/diagnostic imaging
UR - https://pubmed.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/40072344/
U2 - 10.1111/adb.70021
DO - 10.1111/adb.70021
M3 - Article
C2 - 40072344
SN - 1355-6215
VL - 30
JO - Addiction Biology
JF - Addiction Biology
IS - 3
M1 - e70021
ER -