Stable neural underpinnings of emotional cognition subgroups in patients newly diagnosed with bipolar disorder: A prospective fMRI study

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Objectives
This study aimed to investigate the neural underpinnings of emotional cognition subgroups in recently diagnosed patients with bipolar disorder (BD) and change over time over a 15-month follow-up period.

Methods
Patients and healthy controls (HC) underwent emotional and nonemotional cognitive assessments and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) at the baseline (BD n = 87; HC n = 65) and at 15-month follow-up (BD n = 44; HC n = 38). Neural activity during emotion reactivity and regulation in response to aversive pictures was assessed during fMRI. Patients were clustered into subgroups based on their emotional cognition and, with HC, were compared longitudinally on cognition and neural activity during emotion reactivity and regulation.

Results
Patients were optimally clustered into two subgroups: Subgroup 1 (n = 40, 46%) was characterized by heightened emotional reactivity in negative social scenarios, which persisted over time, but were otherwise cognitively intact. This subgroup exhibited stable left amygdala hyper-activity over time during emotion reactivity compared to subgroup 2. Subgroup 2 (n = 47, 54%) was characterized by global emotional cognitive impairments, including stable difficulties with emotion regulation over time. During emotion regulation across both time points, this group exhibited hypo-activity in the left dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Additionally, patients in subgroup 2 had poorer nonemotional cognition, had more psychiatric hospital admissions and history of psychotic episodes than those in subgroup 1.

Conclusions
Broad impairments in emotional cognition in approximately half of BD patients and associated nonemotional cognitive deficits may originate from insufficient recruitment of prefrontal resources, contributing to poorer clinical outcomes.
OriginalsprogEngelsk
TidsskriftBipolar Disorders
ISSN1398-5647
DOI
StatusAccepteret/In press - 2024

Bibliografisk note

Funding Information:
The Research Fund of the Mental Health Services \u2013 Capital Region of Denmark has provided HLK's post\u2010doctorate salary. KWM holds a five\u2010year Lundbeck Foundation Fellowship (grant no. R215\u20102015\u20104121). LSR was supported by CAPES Scholarship 88887.475730/2020\u201000 during the preparation of this manuscript.

Funding Information:
The study is funded by grants from the Mental Health Services, Capital Region of Denmark, Independent Research Fund Denmark (DFF\u20104183\u201000570; DFF\u20140134\u201000027B), Markedsmodningsfonden (the Market Development Fund 2015\u2010310), Gangstedfonden (A29594), Helsefonden (16\u2010B\u20100063), Innovation Fund Denmark (the Innovation Fund, Denmark, 5164\u201000001B), Copenhagen Center for Health Technology (CACHET), EU H2020 ITN (EU project 722561), Augustinus Fonden (16\u20100083).

Publisher Copyright:
© 2024 The Authors. Bipolar Disorders published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

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