Journal article
American Journal of Psychiatry, 2023
APA
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Ben-Zion, Z., Spiller, T., Keynan, J., Admon, R., Levy, I., Liberzon, I., … Harpaz-Rotem, I. (2023). Evaluating the Evidence for Brain-Based Biotypes of Psychiatric Vulnerability in the Acute Aftermath of Trauma. American Journal of Psychiatry.
Chicago/Turabian
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Ben-Zion, Ziv, T. Spiller, J. Keynan, R. Admon, I. Levy, I. Liberzon, A. Shalev, T. Hendler, and I. Harpaz-Rotem. “Evaluating the Evidence for Brain-Based Biotypes of Psychiatric Vulnerability in the Acute Aftermath of Trauma.” American Journal of Psychiatry (2023).
MLA
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Ben-Zion, Ziv, et al. “Evaluating the Evidence for Brain-Based Biotypes of Psychiatric Vulnerability in the Acute Aftermath of Trauma.” American Journal of Psychiatry, 2023.
BibTeX Click to copy
@article{ziv2023a,
title = {Evaluating the Evidence for Brain-Based Biotypes of Psychiatric Vulnerability in the Acute Aftermath of Trauma.},
year = {2023},
journal = {American Journal of Psychiatry},
author = {Ben-Zion, Ziv and Spiller, T. and Keynan, J. and Admon, R. and Levy, I. and Liberzon, I. and Shalev, A. and Hendler, T. and Harpaz-Rotem, I.}
}
OBJECTIVE The weak link between subjective symptom-based diagnostic methods for posttraumatic psychopathology and objectively measured neurobiological indices forms a barrier to the development of effective personalized treatments. To overcome this problem, recent studies have aimed to stratify psychiatric disorders by identifying consistent subgroups based on objective neural markers. Along these lines, a promising 2021 study by Stevens et al. identified distinct brain-based biotypes associated with different longitudinal patterns of posttraumatic symptoms. Here, the authors conducted a conceptual nonexact replication of that study using a comparable data set from a multimodal longitudinal study of recent trauma survivors.
METHODS A total of 130 participants (mean age, 33.61 years, SD=11.21; 48% women) admitted to a general hospital emergency department following trauma exposure underwent demographic, clinical, and neuroimaging assessments 1, 6, and 14 months after trauma. All analyses followed the pipeline outlined in the original study and were conducted in collaboration with its authors.
RESULTS Task-based functional MRI conducted 1 month posttrauma was used to identify four clusters of individuals based on profiles of neural activity reflecting threat and reward reactivity. These clusters were not identical to the previously identified brain-based biotypes and were not associated with prospective symptoms of posttraumatic psychopathology.
CONCLUSIONS Overall, these findings suggest that the original brain-based biotypes of trauma resilience and psychopathology may not generalize to other populations. Thus, caution is warranted when attempting to define subtypes of psychiatric vulnerability using neural indices before treatment implications can be fully realized. Additional replication studies are needed to identify more stable and generalizable neuroimaging-based biotypes of posttraumatic psychopathology.