New in Nature Communications: Mechanisms and interventions promoting healthy frontostriatal dynamics in obsessive-compulsive disorder

Modelling OCD interventions

New paper with Seb Naze and Luca Cocchi and colleagues Mechanisms and interventions promoting healthy frontostriatal dynamics in obsessive-compulsive disorder is now published in Nature Communications!

Authors: Sebastien Naze, Luke J. Hearne, Paula Sanz-Leon, Conor Robinson, Caitlin V. Hall, Saurabh Sonkusare, Bjorn Burgher, Andrew Zalesky, James A. Roberts & Luca Cocchi.

Abstract:

Changes in the frontostriatal system activity support individuals’ perseverance in distressful thoughts and rigid, repetitive behaviours that define obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Converging evidence from preclinical and clinical work suggests that OCD maps onto a functional imbalance in the ventral and dorsal frontostriatal circuits. However, the neural mechanisms supporting these dysregulations remain elusive, their association with symptom severity is unclear, and therapeutic interventions are limited. To address these gaps, we combined neuroimaging and behavioural data from individuals with OCD and controls with computational modelling. We found that bidirectionally decreasing spontaneous neural coupling in the ventromedial circuit while concurrently increasing dorsolateral cortico-striatal coupling delivered the highest functional improvements in OCD. The analysis of longitudinal changes in obsessions and compulsions with respect to modelled neural interventions supported our predictions. By highlighting behaviourally meaningful neural mechanisms hidden from traditional neuroimaging analysis, this study advances knowledge on the neural basis of OCD and provides new therapeutic targets for obsessions and compulsions.

James Roberts
James Roberts
Group Leader
Paula Sanz-Leon
Paula Sanz-Leon
Former postdoc

Currently my research interests include large-scale brain modelling across the lifespan & development of open-source scientific software in Python and Matlab.