Centre for Youth Mental Health - Research Publications

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    Development of the PSYCHS: Positive SYmptoms and Diagnostic Criteria for the CAARMS Harmonized with the SIPS.
    Woods, SW ; Parker, S ; Kerr, MJ ; Walsh, BC ; Wijtenburg, SA ; Prunier, N ; Nunez, AR ; Buccilli, K ; Mourgues-Codern, C ; Brummitt, K ; Kinney, KS ; Trankler, C ; Szacilo, J ; Colton, B-L ; Ali, M ; Haidar, A ; Billah, T ; Huynh, K ; Ahmed, U ; Adery, LL ; Corcoran, CM ; Perkins, DO ; Schiffman, J ; Perez, J ; Mamah, D ; Ellman, LM ; Powers, AR ; Coleman, MJ ; Anticevic, A ; Fusar-Poli, P ; Kane, JM ; Kahn, RS ; McGorry, PD ; Bearden, CE ; Shenton, ME ; Nelson, B ; Calkins, ME ; Hendricks, L ; Bouix, S ; Addington, J ; McGlashan, TH ; Yung, AR ; Accelerating Medicines Partnership Schizophrenia, ( 2023-05-02)
    AIM: To harmonize two ascertainment and severity rating instruments commonly used for the clinical high risk syndrome for psychosis (CHR-P): the Structured Interview for Psychosis-risk Syndromes (SIPS) and the Comprehensive Assessment of At-Risk Mental States (CAARMS). METHODS: The initial workshop is described in the companion report from Addington et al. After the workshop, lead experts for each instrument continued harmonizing attenuated positive symptoms and criteria for psychosis and CHR-P through an intensive series of joint videoconferences. RESULTS: Full harmonization was achieved for attenuated positive symptom ratings and psychosis criteria, and partial harmonization for CHR-P criteria. The semi-structured interview, named P ositive SY mptoms and Diagnostic Criteria for the C AARMS H armonized with the S IPS (PSYCHS), generates CHR-P criteria and severity scores for both CAARMS and SIPS. CONCLUSION: Using the PSYCHS for CHR-P ascertainment, conversion determination, and attenuated positive symptom severity rating will help in comparing findings across studies and in meta-analyses.
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    Cortical profiles of numerous psychiatric disorders and normal development share a common pattern.
    Cao, Z ; Cupertino, RB ; Ottino-Gonzalez, J ; Murphy, A ; Pancholi, D ; Juliano, A ; Chaarani, B ; Albaugh, M ; Yuan, D ; Schwab, N ; Stafford, J ; Goudriaan, AE ; Hutchison, K ; Li, C-SR ; Luijten, M ; Groefsema, M ; Momenan, R ; Schmaal, L ; Sinha, R ; van Holst, RJ ; Veltman, DJ ; Wiers, RW ; Porjesz, B ; Lett, T ; Banaschewski, T ; Bokde, ALW ; Desrivières, S ; Flor, H ; Grigis, A ; Gowland, P ; Heinz, A ; Brühl, R ; Martinot, J-L ; Martinot, M-LP ; Artiges, E ; Nees, F ; Orfanos, DP ; Paus, T ; Poustka, L ; Hohmann, S ; Millenet, S ; Fröhner, JH ; Robinson, L ; Smolka, MN ; Walter, H ; Winterer, J ; Schumann, G ; Whelan, R ; Bhatt, RR ; Zhu, A ; Conrod, P ; Jahanshad, N ; Thompson, PM ; Mackey, S ; Garavan, H ; IMAGEN Consortium, ; ENIGMA Addiction Working Group, (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023-02)
    The neurobiological bases of the association between development and psychopathology remain poorly understood. Here, we identify a shared spatial pattern of cortical thickness (CT) in normative development and several psychiatric and neurological disorders. Principal component analysis (PCA) was applied to CT of 68 regions in the Desikan-Killiany atlas derived from three large-scale datasets comprising a total of 41,075 neurotypical participants. PCA produced a spatially broad first principal component (PC1) that was reproducible across datasets. Then PC1 derived from healthy adult participants was compared to the pattern of CT differences associated with psychiatric and neurological disorders comprising a total of 14,886 cases and 20,962 controls from seven ENIGMA disease-related working groups, normative maturation and aging comprising a total of 17,697 scans from the ABCD Study® and the IMAGEN developmental study, and 17,075 participants from the ENIGMA Lifespan working group, as well as gene expression maps from the Allen Human Brain Atlas. Results revealed substantial spatial correspondences between PC1 and widespread lower CT observed in numerous psychiatric disorders. Moreover, the PC1 pattern was also correlated with the spatial pattern of normative maturation and aging. The transcriptional analysis identified a set of genes including KCNA2, KCNS1 and KCNS2 with expression patterns closely related to the spatial pattern of PC1. The gene category enrichment analysis indicated that the transcriptional correlations of PC1 were enriched to multiple gene ontology categories and were specifically over-represented starting at late childhood, coinciding with the onset of significant cortical maturation and emergence of psychopathology during the prepubertal-to-pubertal transition. Collectively, the present study reports a reproducible latent pattern of CT that captures interregional profiles of cortical changes in both normative brain maturation and a spectrum of psychiatric disorders. The pubertal timing of the expression of PC1-related genes implicates disrupted neurodevelopment in the pathogenesis of the spectrum of psychiatric diseases emerging during adolescence.
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    Developing a Theory of Change for a Digital Youth Mental Health Service (Moderated Online Social Therapy): Mixed Methods Knowledge Synthesis Study
    Cross, S ; Nicholas, J ; Mangelsdorf, S ; Valentine, L ; Baker, S ; McGorry, P ; Gleeson, J ; Alvarez-Jimenez, M (JMIR Publications, 2023)
    BACKGROUND: Common challenges in the youth mental health system include low access, poor uptake, poor adherence, and limited overall effectiveness. Digital technologies offer promise, yet challenges in real-world integration and uptake persist. Moderated Online Social Therapy (MOST) aims to overcome these problems by integrating a comprehensive digital platform into existing youth mental health services. Theory of change (ToC) frameworks can help articulate how and why complex interventions work and what conditions are required for success. OBJECTIVE: The objective of this study is to create a ToC for MOST to explain how it works, why it works, who benefits and how, and what conditions are required for its success. METHODS: We used a multimethod approach to construct a ToC for MOST. The synthesis aimed to assess the real-world impact of MOST, a digital platform designed to enhance face-to-face youth mental health services, and to guide its iterative refinement. Data were gathered from 2 completed and 4 ongoing randomized controlled trials, 11 pilot studies, and over 1000 co-design sessions using MOST. Additionally, published qualitative findings from diverse clinical contexts and a review of related digital mental health literature were included. The study culminated in an updated ToC framework informed by expert feedback. The final ToC was produced in both narrative and table form and captured components common in program logic and ToC frameworks. RESULTS: The MOST ToC captured several assumptions about digital mental health adoption, including factors such as the readiness of young people and service providers to embrace digital platforms. External considerations included high service demand and a potential lack of infrastructure to support integration. Young people and service providers face several challenges and pain points MOST seeks to address, such as limited accessibility, high demand, poor engagement, and a lack of personalized support. Self-determination theory, transdiagnostic psychological treatment approaches, and evidence-based implementation theories and their associated mechanisms are drawn upon to frame the intervention components that make up the platform. Platform usage data are captured and linked to short-, medium-, and long-term intended outcomes, such as reductions in mental health symptoms, improvements in functioning and quality of life, reductions in hospital visits, and reduced overall mental health care costs. CONCLUSIONS: The MOST ToC serves as a strategic framework for refining MOST over time. The creation of the ToC helped guide the development of therapeutic content personalization, user engagement enhancement, and clinician adoption through specialized implementation frameworks. While powerful, the ToC approach has its limitations, such as a lack of standardized methodology and the amount of resourcing required for its development. Nonetheless, it provides an invaluable roadmap for iterative development, evaluation, and scaling of MOST and offers a replicable model for other digital health interventions aiming for targeted, evidence-based impact.
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    Diversity, equity, and inclusivity in observational ambulatory assessment: Recommendations from two decades of Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) research.
    Kaplan, DM ; Tidwell, CA ; Chung, JM ; Alisic, E ; Demiray, B ; Bruni, M ; Evora, S ; Gajewski-Nemes, JA ; Macbeth, A ; Mangelsdorf, SN ; Mascaro, JS ; Minor, KS ; Noga, RN ; Nugent, NR ; Polsinelli, AJ ; Rentscher, KE ; Resnikoff, AW ; Robbins, ML ; Slatcher, RB ; Tejeda-Padron, AB ; Mehl, MR (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023-12-08)
    Ambient audio sampling methods such as the Electronically Activated Recorder (EAR) have become increasingly prominent in clinical and social sciences research. These methods record snippets of naturalistically assessed audio from participants' daily lives, enabling novel observational research about the daily social interactions, identities, environments, behaviors, and speech of populations of interest. In practice, these scientific opportunities are equaled by methodological challenges: researchers' own cultural backgrounds and identities can easily and unknowingly permeate the collection, coding, analysis, and interpretation of social data from daily life. Ambient audio sampling poses unique and significant challenges to cultural humility, diversity, equity, and inclusivity (DEI) in scientific research that require systematized attention. Motivated by this observation, an international consortium of 21 researchers who have used ambient audio sampling methodologies created a workgroup with the aim of improving upon existing published guidelines. We pooled formally and informally documented challenges pertaining to DEI in ambient audio sampling from our collective experience on 40+ studies (most of which used the EAR app) in clinical and healthy populations ranging from children to older adults. This article presents our resultant recommendations and argues for the incorporation of community-engaged research methods in observational ambulatory assessment designs looking forward. We provide concrete recommendations across each stage typical of an ambient audio sampling study (recruiting and enrolling participants, developing coding systems, training coders, handling multi-linguistic participants, data analysis and interpretation, and dissemination of results) as well as guiding questions that can be used to adapt these recommendations to project-specific constraints and needs.
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    A longitudinal study of childhood maltreatment, subcortical development, and subcortico-cortical structural maturational coupling from early to late adolescence.
    Rakesh, D ; Elzeiny, R ; Vijayakumar, N ; Whittle, S (Cambridge University Press (CUP), 2023-12)
    BACKGROUND: Examining neurobiological mechanisms that may transmit the effects of childhood maltreatment on mental health in youth is crucial for understanding vulnerability to psychopathology. This study investigated associations between childhood maltreatment, adolescent structural brain development, and mental health trajectories into young-adulthood. METHODS: Structural magnetic resonance imaging data was acquired from 144 youth at three time points (age 12, 16, and 18 years). Childhood maltreatment was reported to occur prior to the first scan. Linear mixed models were utilized to examine the association between total childhood maltreatment, neglect, abuse and (i) amygdala and hippocampal volume development, and (ii) maturational coupling between amygdala/hippocampus volume and the thickness of prefrontal regions. We also examined whether brain development mediated the association between maltreatment and depressive and anxiety symptoms trajectories from age 12 to 28. RESULTS: Total maltreatment, and neglect, were associated with positive maturational coupling between the amygdala and caudal anterior cingulate cortex (cACC), whereby at higher and lower levels of amygdala growth, maltreatment was associated with lower and higher PFC thinning, respectively. Neglect was also associated with maturational coupling of the hippocampus with prefrontal regions. While positive amygdala-cACC maturational coupling was associated with greater increases in anxiety symptoms, it did not significantly mediate the association between maltreatment and anxiety symptom trajectories. CONCLUSION: We found maltreatment to be associated with altered patterns of coupling between subcortical and prefrontal regions during adolescence, suggesting that maltreatment is associated with the development of socio-emotional neural circuitry. The implications of these findings for mental health require further investigation.
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    Johan Christoffer Cullberg (6th January 1934-14th June 2022)1.
    Johannessen, JO ; McGorry, PD (Wiley, 2023-01)
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    Acceptability and feasibility of a multidomain harmonized data collection protocol in youth mental health
    Youn, S ; Mamsa, S ; Allott, K ; Berger, M ; Polari, A ; Rice, S ; Schmaal, L ; Wood, S ; Lavoie, S (WILEY, 2023-05)
    OBJECTIVE: To develop targeted treatment for young people experiencing mental illness, a better understanding of the biological, psychological, and social changes is required, particularly during the early stages of illness. To do this, large datasets need to be collected using standardized methods. A harmonized data collection protocol was tested in a youth mental health research setting to determine its acceptability and feasibility. METHOD: Eighteen participants completed the harmonization protocol, including a clinical interview, self-report measures, neurocognitive measures, and mock assessments of magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and blood. The feasibility of the protocol was assessed by recording recruitment rates, study withdrawals, missing data, and protocol deviations. Subjective responses from participant surveys and focus groups were used to examine the acceptability of the protocol. RESULTS: Twenty-eight young people were approached, 18 consented, and four did not complete the study. Most participants reported positive subjective impressions of the protocol as a whole and showed interest in participating in the study again, if given the opportunity. Participants generally perceived the MRI and neurocognitive tasks as interesting and suggested that the assessment of clinical presentation could be shortened. CONCLUSION: Overall, the harmonized data collection protocol appeared to be feasible and generally well-accepted by participants. With a majority of participants finding the assessment of clinical presentation too long and repetitive, the authors have made suggestions to shorten the self-reports. The broader implementation of this protocol could allow researchers to create large datasets and better understand how psychopathological and neurobiological changes occur in young people with mental ill-health.
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    Psychological, Physical, and Sexual Violence Against Children in Australian Community Sport: Frequency, Perpetrator, and Victim Characteristics.
    Pankowiak, A ; Woessner, MN ; Parent, S ; Vertommen, T ; Eime, R ; Spaaij, R ; Harvey, J ; Parker, AG (SAGE Publications, 2023-02)
    Childhood sport participation is associated with physical, social, and mental health benefits, which are more likely to be realized if the sport environment is safe. However, our understanding of children's experience of psychological, physical, and sexual violence in community sport in Australia is limited. The aims of this study were to provide preliminary evidence on the extent of experiences of violence during childhood participation in Australian community sport and to identify common perpetrators of and risk factors for violence. The Violence Towards Athletes Questionnaire (VTAQ) was administered online to a convenience sample of Australian adults (>18 years), retrospectively reporting experiences of violence during childhood community sport. Frequencies of experience of violence were calculated and Chi-square tests were conducted to determine differences between genders. In total, there were 886 respondents included in the analysis. Most survey respondents were women (63%) and about a third were men (35%). About 82% of respondents experienced violence in sport as a child. Psychological violence was most prevalent (76%), followed by physical (66%) and sexual (38%) violence. Peers perpetrated the highest rates of psychological violence (69%), and the rates of physical and psychological violence by coaches (both >50%) were also high. Age, sexual orientation, disability, and hours of weekly sport participation as a child were all associated with childhood experience of violence in sport. The rates of interpersonal violence against children in sport were high. This novel data on perpetrators of the violence and the risk factors for experiencing violence provides further context to inform safeguarding strategies in sport. A national prevalence study is recommended to advance our understanding of the childhood experiences of violence in Australian sport.
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    "Our Job is to be so Temporary": Designing Digital Tools that Meet the Needs of Care Managers and their Patients with Mental Health Concerns
    Kornfield, R ; Lattie, EG ; Nicholas, J ; Knapp, AA ; Mohr, DC ; Reddy, M (Association for Computing Machinery (ACM), 2023-10)
    Digital tools have potential to support collaborative management of mental health conditions, but we need to better understand how to integrate them in routine healthcare, particularly for patients with both physical and mental health needs. We therefore conducted interviews and design workshops with 1) a group of care managers who support patients with complex health needs, and 2) their patients whose health needs include mental health concerns. We investigate both groups' views of potential applications of digital tools within care management. Findings suggest that care managers felt underprepared to play an ongoing role in addressing mental health issues and had concerns about the burden and ambiguity of providing support through new digital channels. In contrast, patients envisioned benefiting from ongoing mental health support from care managers, including support in using digital tools. Patients' and care managers' needs may diverge such that meeting both through the same tools presents a significant challenge. We discuss how successful design and integration of digital tools into care management would require reconceptualizing these professionals' roles in mental health support.
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    Volume of subcortical brain regions in social anxiety disorder: mega-analytic results from 37 samples in the ENIGMA-Anxiety Working Group.
    Groenewold, NA ; Bas-Hoogendam, JM ; Amod, AR ; Laansma, MA ; Van Velzen, LS ; Aghajani, M ; Hilbert, K ; Oh, H ; Salas, R ; Jackowski, AP ; Pan, PM ; Salum, GA ; Blair, JR ; Blair, KS ; Hirsch, J ; Pantazatos, SP ; Schneier, FR ; Talati, A ; Roelofs, K ; Volman, I ; Blanco-Hinojo, L ; Cardoner, N ; Pujol, J ; Beesdo-Baum, K ; Ching, CRK ; Thomopoulos, SI ; Jansen, A ; Kircher, T ; Krug, A ; Nenadić, I ; Stein, F ; Dannlowski, U ; Grotegerd, D ; Lemke, H ; Meinert, S ; Winter, A ; Erb, M ; Kreifelts, B ; Gong, Q ; Lui, S ; Zhu, F ; Mwangi, B ; Soares, JC ; Wu, M-J ; Bayram, A ; Canli, M ; Tükel, R ; Westenberg, PM ; Heeren, A ; Cremers, HR ; Hofmann, D ; Straube, T ; Doruyter, AGG ; Lochner, C ; Peterburs, J ; Van Tol, M-J ; Gur, RE ; Kaczkurkin, AN ; Larsen, B ; Satterthwaite, TD ; Filippi, CA ; Gold, AL ; Harrewijn, A ; Zugman, A ; Bülow, R ; Grabe, HJ ; Völzke, H ; Wittfeld, K ; Böhnlein, J ; Dohm, K ; Kugel, H ; Schrammen, E ; Zwanzger, P ; Leehr, EJ ; Sindermann, L ; Ball, TM ; Fonzo, GA ; Paulus, MP ; Simmons, A ; Stein, MB ; Klumpp, H ; Phan, KL ; Furmark, T ; Månsson, KNT ; Manzouri, A ; Avery, SN ; Blackford, JU ; Clauss, JA ; Feola, B ; Harper, JC ; Sylvester, CM ; Lueken, U ; Veltman, DJ ; Winkler, AM ; Jahanshad, N ; Pine, DS ; Thompson, PM ; Stein, DJ ; Van der Wee, NJA (Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2023-03)
    There is limited convergence in neuroimaging investigations into volumes of subcortical brain regions in social anxiety disorder (SAD). The inconsistent findings may arise from variations in methodological approaches across studies, including sample selection based on age and clinical characteristics. The ENIGMA-Anxiety Working Group initiated a global mega-analysis to determine whether differences in subcortical volumes can be detected in adults and adolescents with SAD relative to healthy controls. Volumetric data from 37 international samples with 1115 SAD patients and 2775 controls were obtained from ENIGMA-standardized protocols for image segmentation and quality assurance. Linear mixed-effects analyses were adjusted for comparisons across seven subcortical regions in each hemisphere using family-wise error (FWE)-correction. Mixed-effects d effect sizes were calculated. In the full sample, SAD patients showed smaller bilateral putamen volume than controls (left: d = -0.077, pFWE = 0.037; right: d = -0.104, pFWE = 0.001), and a significant interaction between SAD and age was found for the left putamen (r = -0.034, pFWE = 0.045). Smaller bilateral putamen volumes (left: d = -0.141, pFWE < 0.001; right: d = -0.158, pFWE < 0.001) and larger bilateral pallidum volumes (left: d = 0.129, pFWE = 0.006; right: d = 0.099, pFWE = 0.046) were detected in adult SAD patients relative to controls, but no volumetric differences were apparent in adolescent SAD patients relative to controls. Comorbid anxiety disorders and age of SAD onset were additional determinants of SAD-related volumetric differences in subcortical regions. To conclude, subtle volumetric alterations in subcortical regions in SAD were detected. Heterogeneity in age and clinical characteristics may partly explain inconsistencies in previous findings. The association between alterations in subcortical volumes and SAD illness progression deserves further investigation, especially from adolescence into adulthood.