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A 16-year study of longitudinal volumetric brain development in males with autism

Molly B. D. Prigge, Nicholas Lange, Erin D. Bigler, Jace B. King, Douglas Dean, Nagesh Adluru, Andrew L. Alexander, Janet E. Lainhart, Brandon A. Zielinski

2021NeuroImage59 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Autism spectrum disorder (ASD) is a neurodevelopmental disorder with unknown brain etiology. Our knowledge to date about structural brain development across the lifespan in ASD comes mainly from cross-sectional studies, thereby limiting our understanding of true age effects within individuals with the disorder that can only be gained through longitudinal research. The present study describes FreeSurfer-derived volumetric findings from a longitudinal dataset consisting of 607 T1-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scans collected from 105 male individuals with ASD (349 MRIs) and 125 typically developing male controls (258 MRIs). Participants were six to forty-five years of age at their first scan, and were scanned up to 5 times over a period of 16 years (average inter-scan interval of 3.7 years). Atypical age-related volumetric trajectories in ASD included enlarged gray matter volume in early childhood that approached levels of the control group by late childhood, an age-related increase in ventricle volume resulting in enlarged ventricles by early adulthood and reduced corpus callosum age-related volumetric increase resulting in smaller corpus callosum volume in adulthood. Larger corpus callosum volume was related to a lower (better) ADOS score at the most recent study visit for the participants with ASD. These longitudinal findings expand our knowledge of volumetric brain-based abnormalities in males with ASD, and highlight the need to continue to examine brain structure across the lifespan and well into adulthood.

Topics & Concepts

Corpus callosumAutism spectrum disorderBrain sizeLateral ventriclesPsychologyLongitudinal studyAutismMagnetic resonance imagingNeuroimagingAudiologyMedicineDevelopmental psychologyNeuroscienceRadiologyPathologyAutism Spectrum Disorder ResearchGenetics and Neurodevelopmental DisordersCongenital heart defects research
A 16-year study of longitudinal volumetric brain development in males with autism | Litcius