Brain alterations in Cocaine Use Disorder: Does the route of use matter and does it relate to the treatment outcome?

•CUD patients display widespread gray matter atrophy.•We studied anatomical MRI in CUD patients entering detoxification.•The route of use and the treatment outcome are associated with these alterations.•Crack-cocaine use is associated with specific temporal alterations.•Relapsers during the 3–months...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging 2024-08, Vol.342, p.111830, Article 111830
Hauptverfasser: Poireau, Margaux, Segobin, Shailendra, Maillard, Angéline, Clergue-Duval, Virgile, Icick, Romain, Azuar, Julien, Volle, Emmanuelle, Delmaire, Christine, Bloch, Vanessa, Pitel, Anne-Lise, Vorspan, Florence
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container_title Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging
container_volume 342
creator Poireau, Margaux
Segobin, Shailendra
Maillard, Angéline
Clergue-Duval, Virgile
Icick, Romain
Azuar, Julien
Volle, Emmanuelle
Delmaire, Christine
Bloch, Vanessa
Pitel, Anne-Lise
Vorspan, Florence
description •CUD patients display widespread gray matter atrophy.•We studied anatomical MRI in CUD patients entering detoxification.•The route of use and the treatment outcome are associated with these alterations.•Crack-cocaine use is associated with specific temporal alterations.•Relapsers during the 3–months follow-up showed smaller volumes in the vermis. Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD) is an important health issue, associated with structural brain abnormalities. However, the impact of the route of administration and their predictive value for relapse remain unknown. Methods: We conducted an anatomical MRI study in 55 CUD patients (26 CUD-Crack and 29 CUD-Hydro) entering inpatient detoxification, and 38 matched healthy controls. In patients, a 3-months outpatient follow-up was carried out to specify the treatment outcome status (relapser when cocaine was consumed once or more during the past month). A Voxel-Based Morphometry approach was used. Compared with controls, CUD patients had widespread gray matter alterations, mostly in frontal and temporal cortices, but also in the cerebellum and several sub-cortical structures. We then compared CUD-Crack with CUD-Hydro patients and found that crack-cocaine use was associated with lower volume in the right inferior and middle temporal gyri, and the right fusiform gyrus. Cerebellar vermis was smaller during detoxification in subsequent relapsers compared to three-months abstainers. Patients with CUD display widespread cortical and subcortical brain shrinkage. Patients with preferential crack-cocaine use and subsequent relapsers showed specific gray matter volume deficits, suggesting that different patterns of cocaine use and different clinical outcome are associated with different brain macrostructure.
doi_str_mv 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2024.111830
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Cocaine Use Disorder (CUD) is an important health issue, associated with structural brain abnormalities. However, the impact of the route of administration and their predictive value for relapse remain unknown. Methods: We conducted an anatomical MRI study in 55 CUD patients (26 CUD-Crack and 29 CUD-Hydro) entering inpatient detoxification, and 38 matched healthy controls. In patients, a 3-months outpatient follow-up was carried out to specify the treatment outcome status (relapser when cocaine was consumed once or more during the past month). A Voxel-Based Morphometry approach was used. Compared with controls, CUD patients had widespread gray matter alterations, mostly in frontal and temporal cortices, but also in the cerebellum and several sub-cortical structures. We then compared CUD-Crack with CUD-Hydro patients and found that crack-cocaine use was associated with lower volume in the right inferior and middle temporal gyri, and the right fusiform gyrus. Cerebellar vermis was smaller during detoxification in subsequent relapsers compared to three-months abstainers. Patients with CUD display widespread cortical and subcortical brain shrinkage. Patients with preferential crack-cocaine use and subsequent relapsers showed specific gray matter volume deficits, suggesting that different patterns of cocaine use and different clinical outcome are associated with different brain macrostructure.</description><identifier>ISSN: 0925-4927</identifier><identifier>ISSN: 1872-7506</identifier><identifier>EISSN: 1872-7506</identifier><identifier>DOI: 10.1016/j.pscychresns.2024.111830</identifier><identifier>PMID: 38820804</identifier><language>eng</language><publisher>Netherlands: Elsevier B.V</publisher><subject>Alterations ; Cocaine use disorder ; Crack-cocaine ; Life Sciences ; Relapse ; Severity ; Treatment Outcome ; Voxel-based morphometry</subject><ispartof>Psychiatry research. 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ispartof Psychiatry research. Neuroimaging, 2024-08, Vol.342, p.111830, Article 111830
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source Elsevier ScienceDirect Journals
subjects Alterations
Cocaine use disorder
Crack-cocaine
Life Sciences
Relapse
Severity
Treatment Outcome
Voxel-based morphometry
title Brain alterations in Cocaine Use Disorder: Does the route of use matter and does it relate to the treatment outcome?
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