Staff and Researcher Publications

Authors

Sophie Townend
Marlene Staginnus
Yidian Gao
Nina Alexander
Volker Arolt
Tobias Banaschewski
Mark A Bellgrove
Vivek Benegal
Robert J Blair
Laura Blanco-Hinojo
Ole Jonas Boeken
Joscha Böhnlein
Sven Bölte
Linda M Bonnekoh
Daniel Brandeis
Rodrigo A Bressan
Fabian Breuer
Willem B Bruin
Jan K Buitelaar
Katie L Burkhouse
Monica E Calkins
Marta Cano
Narcis Cardoner
Hui Chen
Xianliang Chen
David R Coghill
Olivier F Colins
Colm G Connolly
Michael C Craig
Kathryn R Cullen
Udo Dannlowski
Christopher G Davey
Andrea Dietrich
Daifeng Dong
Christine M Freitag
Thomas Frodl
Liesbet Goossens
Dominik Grotegerd
Raquel E Gur
Ruben C Gur
Jan Haavik
Cindy C Hagan
Tim Hahn
Alfons O Hamm
Ben J Harrison
Catharina A Hartman
Martin J Herrmann
Tiffany C Ho
Pieter J Hoekstra
Bharath Holla
Karim Ibrahim
Andrea Jackowski
Hamidreza Jamalabadi
Yali Jiang
Tilo Kircher
Kerstin Konrad
Anna Kraus
Jonna Kuntsi
Till Langhammer
Luisa Lazaro
Elisabeth J Leehr
Ulrike Lueken
Ren Ma
Frank P MacMaster
Gisele G Manfro
Anne Martinelli
Hannah Meinert
Susanne Meinert
Jarosław M Michałowski
Qingsen Ming
Robert Moeck
Lilianne R Mujica-Parodi
Benson Mwangi
Janina Neufeld
Joel T Nigg
Ruth L O'Gorman Tuura
Hyuntaek Oh
Jaap Oosterlaan
Yannis Paloyelis
Pedro M Pan
Luca Passamonti
Wenceslao Peñate
K Luan Phan
Kerstin J Plessen
Jesus Pujol
Karl Lundin Remnélius
Francisco Rivero
Katya Rubia
Ramiro Salas
Giovanni A Salum
Theodore D Satterthwaite
Anne Schienle
Elisabeth Schrammen
Koen R J Schruers
Gunter Schumann
Arjun Sethi
Tim Silk
Norbert Skokauskas
Jordan Smoller
Jair C Soares
Lin Sørensen
Christina Stadler
Michael C Stevens
Benjamin Straube
Thomas Straube
Andreas Ströhle
Gustavo Sudre
Denis G Sukhodolsky
Kate Sully
Xiaoqiang Sun
Chad M Sylvester
Nicola Toschi
Steven J A van der Werff
Alasdair Vance
Robert Vermeiren
Albert Wabnegger
Xiaoping Wang
Julia Wendt
Sarah Whittle
Julian Wiemer
Anderson M Winkler
Hans U Wittchen
Mon-Ju Wu
Qiong Wu
Tony T Yang
Yunbo Yang
Shuqiao Yao
Jibiao Zhang
Jiansong Zhou
Andre Zugman
Giovana B Zunta-Soares
Peter M Zwanzger
Sophia I Thomopoulos
Neda Jahanshad
Paul M Thompson
Kevin Hilbert
Arielle Baskin-Sommers
Charlotte A M Cecil
Moji Aghajani
Daniel S Pine
Nic J A van der Wee
Dan J Stein
Nynke A Groenewold
Janna Marie Bas-Hoogendam
Laura K M Han
Elena Pozzi
Lianne Schmaal
Barbara Franke
Martine Hoogman
Esther Walton
Stephane A De Brito
Graeme Fairchild
ENIGMA Antisocial Behavior, Anxiety, ADHD, and MDD Working Groups

Language

English

Publication Date

8-12-2025

Journal

Biological Psychiatry

DOI

10.1016/j.biopsych.2025.08.003

PMID

40812743

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Externalizing and internalizing disorders are common in youth but are often studied separately, preventing researchers from identifying shared (i.e., transdiagnostic) alterations in brain structure. Using data from the ENIGMA Consortium, we conducted a mega-analysis to identify shared and distinct cortical and subcortical brain alterations across internalizing (anxiety disorders and depression) and externalizing disorders (attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder [ADHD] and conduct disorder [CD]) in youth.

METHODS: 3D T1-weighted MRI data from youth (aged 4-21 years) with anxiety disorders (n=1,044), depression (n=504), ADHD (n=1,317), and CD (n=1,172), along with healthy controls (n=4,743) were analyzed. We assessed group differences in regional cortical thickness, surface area, and subcortical volume using linear models, adjusted for site, age, and sex, and total intracranial volume in the surface area and subcortical volume models.

RESULTS: We observed transdiagnostic associations, with both internalizing and externalizing disorders characterized by lower surface area in the insula, entorhinal cortex, and middle temporal gyrus, and lower amygdala volume (Cohen's ds=-0.07 to -0.24), as well as total surface area and intracranial volume (ds=-0.11 to -0.25). Externalizing-specific reductions in surface area were observed in fronto-parietal regions (ds=-0.08 to -0.13), but no internalizing-specific associations were identified. Disorder-specific alterations were identified for ADHD, CD, and anxiety disorders, but not depression.

CONCLUSIONS: Both common and disorder-specific alterations were identified, with regions involved in salience attribution and emotion processing implicated across internalizing and externalizing disorders. These findings can guide future research targeting common biological processes across youth psychiatric disorders as well as features unique to individual disorders.

Keywords

Child and adolescent psychiatry, ENIGMA, Meta-analysis, Structural MRI, Transdiagnostic, Youth

Published Open-Access

yes

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