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ORIGINAL RESEARCH article

Front. Psychiatry, 19 July 2019
Sec. Addictive Disorders
This article is part of the Research Topic Brain and Cognition for Addiction Medicine: From Prevention to Recovery View all 32 articles

Oxytocin-Induced Changes in Intrinsic Network Connectivity in Cocaine Use Disorder: Modulation by Gender, Childhood Trauma, and Years of Use

Jane E. Joseph*Jane E. Joseph1*Brandon K. VaughanBrandon K. Vaughan1Christopher C. CampChristopher C. Camp1Nathaniel L. BakerNathaniel L. Baker2Brian J. ShermanBrian J. Sherman3Megan Moran-Santa MariaMegan Moran-Santa Maria3Aimee McRae-Clark,Aimee McRae-Clark3,4Kathleen T. Brady,Kathleen T. Brady3,4
  • 1Department of Neuroscience, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States
  • 2Department of Public Health Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States
  • 3Department of Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Medical University of South Carolina, Charleston, SC, United States
  • 4Ralph H. Johnson VA Medical Center, Charleston, SC, United States

Cocaine use disorder (CUD) is a major public health concern with devastating social, economic, and mental health implications. A better understanding of the underlying neurobiology and phenotypic variations in individuals with CUD is necessary for the development of effective and targeted treatments. In this study, 39 women and 54 men with CUD completed a 6-min resting-state functional magnetic resonance imaging scan after intranasal oxytocin (OXY) or placebo administration. Graph-theory network analysis was used to quantify functional connectivity changes caused by OXY in striatum, anterior cingulate cortex (ACC), insula, and amygdala nodes of interest. OXY increased connectivity in the right ACC and left amygdala in males, whereas OXY increased connectivity in the right ACC and right accumbens in females. Machine learning was then used to associate treatment response (placebo minus OXY) in nodes of interest with years of cocaine use and severity of childhood trauma separately for males and females. Childhood trauma and years of cocaine use were associated with OXY-induced changes in ACC connectivity for both men and women, but connectivity changes in the amygdala were associated with years of cocaine use in men and connectivity changes in the right insula were associated with years of cocaine use in women. These findings suggest that salience network nodes (ACC and insula) are potential OXY treatment targets in CUD, with the amygdala as a treatment target for men and the accumbens as a treatment target for women.

Introduction

Gender differences in addictive and affective disorders are well established (1, 2). Both gonadal and stress hormones can modulate brain function, leading to different levels of susceptibility to neuropsychiatric disorders and treatment response. Biomedical research focused on understanding hormonal modulation and gender differences in brain function may be advanced by including neuroimaging markers of functional brain organization. One such marker is resting-state functional brain connectivity (RSFC), which uses functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) to image the brain while an individual is alert and awake but not engaged in any particular cognitive task; that is, when the brain is at “rest.” This continuous resting-state fMRI (rsfMRI) paradigm can reveal brain regions that are temporally synchronized with other brain regions to characterize brain regions that seem to activate (or deactivate) in unison, revealing additional phenotypes that are not captured with current behavioral assessments or neurobiological markers. Therefore, the addition of rsfMRI as a tool in understanding psychiatric illness and gender-specific susceptibility to different disorders may ultimately lead to better treatments and outcomes.

rsfMRI has been widely used in addictions research, including studies in cocaine use disorder (CUD) (3, 4). Differences in RSFC between CUD and control subjects have been reported in numerous circuits, but there is no clear consensus that any particular circuit or resting-state network can be considered a reliable phenotype for CUD. Nevertheless, RSFC has been associated with important clinical variables, such as measures of cocaine use (57), impulsivity, inattention, or cognitive control (5, 6, 810) and risk for relapse (1016). For example, years of cocaine use (which will be the primary cocaine use variable in the present study) have been associated with reduced RSFC in the ventromedial prefrontal, hypothalamic, insula, and anterior cingulate cortex (ACC) regions (7, 14). Although not all studies have shown an association between compromised RSFC and years of use (5), the collective findings point to RSFC as a promising imaging biomarker for relapse risk or other behaviors implicated in the addiction process (17).

However, two important variables that are known to modulate addiction neurocircuitry—gender and trauma exposure—have been less studied in rsfMRI studies of CUD. Sex differences were examined in only one RSFC study (7) and revealed greater connectivity between the medial hypothalamus and a critical node of the default mode network, the precuneus, in female cocaine users compared to males. A recent study has also examined modulation of RSFC by history of childhood trauma in CUD (18). The CUD group reported that some childhood trauma showed greater amygdala RSFC with several striatal regions, the insula, medial temporal regions, and the brain stem. These studies are an important step toward understanding individual differences in RSFC, but more studies are needed to characterize RSFC phenotypes that may lead to the development of individualized treatment approaches.

One potential treatment being explored for substance use disorders (SUD) is the neuropeptide oxytocin (OXY). Childhood trauma (19, 20) and chronic substance use (21) can both lead to neuroadaptations in the OXY system. In addition, some studies have shown that exogenous OXY may reverse drug-induced neuroadaptations [see Ref. (21), for review] or can alter neural response in stress-related circuitry (2224). However, the effect of exogenous OXY may not be the same in men and women because of gender differences in neuropsychiatric sequelae of childhood trauma and the neurobiology of OXY (25, 26).

Few studies, however, have examined gender differences in RSFC changes caused by acute OXY administration, and no studies have examined these changes in individuals with CUD. Seeley and colleagues (27) reviewed 11 studies that examined changes in RSFC caused by acute intranasal OXY administration in healthy controls and individuals with anxiety disorders (posttraumatic stress disorder, generalized social anxiety disorder) or autism spectrum disorder. Most of these studies focused on connectivity of the amygdala with medial prefrontal or cingulate regions. Although findings are mixed as to whether OXY increases or decreases amygdala connectivity, individual differences like gender and psychopathology modulate this connectivity. Whole-brain analyses of RSFC have indicated that acute administration of OXY also increases connectivity in brain regions other than the amygdala, including the striatum, insula, and cingulated (28, 29). In addition, enhanced connectivity under OXY may depend on gender and trauma history, as well as the specific amygdala (24) or striatal nuclei (30) targeted in a given study.

Prior research has demonstrated that females with SUD associate relapse with interpersonal stress and negative affect (31, 32), whereas males with CUD show a more robust reward circuitry response to cocaine cues than females (33, 34). Potenza et al. (35) reported that corticostriatal-limbic hyperactivity was associated primarily with drug cues in men and stress cues in women. These findings suggest that stress circuitry may play a more important role in intrinsic functional brain organization in women with CUD, whereas reward circuitry may play a more prominent role in men with CUD.

To gain a better understanding of gender differences in neural response to OXY in CUD, the present study used RSFC to examine changes in stress- and addiction-related neurocircuitry in response to an acute dose of intranasal OXY in men and women with CUD. More specifically, the goal of this study was to understand the association between graph-theory-based network properties that reflect OXY treatment response and two individual subject variables of interest for SUD: childhood trauma and years of cocaine use. Predictive modeling was used to establish network profiles of OXY response associated with childhood trauma and years of cocaine use in men and women with CUD. The focus was on network connectivity of regions implicated in both substance use and childhood trauma, that is, the striatum, amygdala, insula, and ACC.

Given prior findings, the predictions of this study were that a) childhood trauma was expected to be more strongly associated with OXY connectivity changes in the amygdala because of its involvement in stress reactivity and trauma history (36, 37) and modulation of amygdala RSFC in posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) (24) and recent trauma exposure (38); b) years of cocaine use was expected to be more strongly associated with OXY connectivity changes in the striatum because of neuroadaptations of striatal circuitry in addiction (39); c) the major nodes of the salience network (insula, cingulate) were expected to be associated with both childhood trauma and years of cocaine use because of the role of this network in SUD (17) and psychiatric disorders more broadly (40); d) OXY response in network regions associated with childhood trauma and years of cocaine use was expected to be different in men and women. Prior findings suggest that stress circuitry (e.g., amygdala) will exert a stronger network influence in females and reward circuitry (e.g., striatum) will exert a stronger network influence in males.

Materials and Methods

Participants

Participants took part in a large study investigating the effect of OXY on subjective and neuroendocrine responses to stressors. The current crossover analysis included only data from the rsfMRI component of the study. A total of 93 non-treatment-seeking CUD individuals who responded to local media advertisements over a 54-month period completed the fMRI scanning procedures. Written informed consent was obtained before study assessments were administered. All procedures were conducted in accordance with Good Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Declaration of Helsinki and received institutional review board (IRB) approval. General exclusion criteria included 1) pregnancy, nursing, or plan to become pregnant during the course of the study; 2) women who had a complete hysterectomy, were postmenopausal, or receiving hormone replacement or hormonal contraceptive therapy; 3) history of or current significant hematological, endocrine, cardiovascular, pulmonary, renal, gastrointestinal, or neurological diseases; 4) history of or current psychotic, panic, eating, or bipolar affective disorders; 5) current major depressive disorder and PTSD; 6) history of or current medical conditions that might affect hypothalamic pituitary axis (HPA)axis activity; 7) synthetic glucocorticoid or exogenous steroid therapy within 1 month of testing; 8) psychotropic medications (with the exception of selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors), opiates or opiate antagonists, benzodiazepines, antipsychotics, beta-blockers, and other medications that might interfere with HPA axis activity or physiologic measurements; 9) acute illness or fever; 10) Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders-IV (DSM-IV) criteria for substance dependence except alcohol, nicotine, or marijuana within the past 60 days; 11) unwillingness or inability to maintain abstinence from cocaine and other drugs of abuse (except nicotine) for 3 days prior to the cue–reactivity sessions; or 12) MRI contraindications.

Assessment

Participants meeting prescreening criteria were evaluated for study eligibility with the Mini-International Neuropsychiatric Interview (MINI) (41). The substance use module of the Structured Clinical Interview for DSM-IV (SCID-IV) was used to assess current and lifetime SUD (42). Substance use in the 90 days before the study was assessed using the Time-Line Follow-Back (43). The Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) (44) was used to assess the extent to which individuals experienced five domains of childhood abuse and neglect (sexual abuse, physical abuse, emotional abuse, emotional neglect, and physical neglect). Participants answered each of 25 questions using a 5-point Likert scale ranging from 1 (never true) to 5 (very often true). A medical history and physical examination were completed to assess for medical exclusions. Participants meeting inclusion criteria and no exclusion criteria were scheduled to complete the study procedures and instructed to not use cocaine or other drugs of abuse for a minimum of 3 days before the test sessions.

Study Procedures

Participants completed one 6-min resting-state fMRI session on each of two consecutive days (a cocaine cue reactivity task was also completed on each day, but those results are not reported here). On day 1 of testing, participants arrived at the Medical University of South Carolina’s (MUSC) Addiction Sciences Division research clinic at 10:00 a.m. Upon arrival, urine pregnancy tests were administered. Smokers were provided with a nicotine patch. Self-reports, urine drug screens (Roche Diagnostics, Indianapolis, Indiana), and breathalyzer tests (AlcoSensor III, Intoximeters, Inc., St. Louis, Missouri) were used to assess abstinence. If the pregnancy and drug tests were negative [with the exception of Tetrahydrocannabinol (THC)], study procedures continued. At 11:30 a.m., subjective ratings were obtained. A modified version of the Within Session Rating Scale was used to assess subjective ratings of craving, anxiety, and stress (45). This 1–10 visual analogue scale is anchored with the adjectival modifiers (“not at all,” “mildly,” “moderately,” and “extremely”). The Cocaine Craving Questionnaire (CCQ)-Brief was used to assess cocaine craving. The State-Trait Anxiety Inventory (STAI) was used to assess anxiety symptoms (46). Participants were then provided a standardized lunch.

At 1:20 p.m., participants were administered 40 IU of OXY nasal spray or matching placebo (PBO). This dose was selected based on previous studies using similar doses of OXY (4749) as well as our own previous work (50, 51). Timing of administration was also based on previous studies showing central activity of OXY 40 min after intranasal administration (50, 52). Intranasal OXY and matching PBO were compounded by the MUSC Investigational Drug Service. To achieve balance in sample size with respect to treatment order across genders, a block randomized design with randomly varying block sizes was used. Half of the participants were randomized to OXY on day 1 and half to PBO.

Subjective measures were repeated at 1:55 p.m. Scanning procedures commenced at 2:00 p.m. The 6-min rsfMRI session instructed participants to fixate a centrally presented crosshair but otherwise had no specific instructions other than to remain awake and alert and minimize head movement.

fMRI data images were acquired on a Siemens Trio 3.0 Tesla scanner with a 12-channel head coil (Siemens Medical, Erlangen, Germany) at MUSC for the majority of subjects (36 females, 53 males). Data from four of the subjects (one male) were collected on a Siemens PRISMA FIT 3.0 Tesla scanner with a 32-channel head coil, also at MUSC. During initial scanner tuning, localizing, and structural scanning, participants were shown relaxation images (i.e., 20 scenic pictures, each displayed for 30 s, and repeated if necessary). A high-resolution T1-weighted MPRAGE anatomical scan (TR = 2.25 s, TE = 4.2 ms, flip angle = 9°, 176 sagittal slices, field of view = 256 mm, 256 × 256 matrix, thickness = 1.0 mm) covering the entire brain and positioned using a sagittal scout image was acquired for coregistration and normalization of functional images. T2*-weighted gradient echo EPI images were acquired with the following parameters (parameters were identical for the TRIO and PRISMA): TR = 2,000 ms, TE = 27 ms, flip angle = 76°, 36 axial slices (field of view = 237 mm × 237 mm, thickness = 3.7 mm voxels, in interleaved order). A gradient field map image was collected to match the spatial parameters of the EPI images.

After completion of the first scan, participants returned the next day and completed identical procedures with the opposite treatment condition. At the end of the second scan day, participants were debriefed and compensated.

Data Analysis

Demographics and Subject Characteristics

Baseline demographic and subject characteristics as well as prescan subjective ratings were compared across genders using independent-samples t-tests for continuous variables and chi-square tests across categorical characteristics. Data are reported as means and standard deviations for continuous variables and proportions for categorical variables.

An independent-samples t-test (unequal variances assumed because of unbalanced sample sizes) compared PBO minus OXY difference score for TRIO versus PRISMA scanner data in each of the 20 nodes of interest for clustering coefficient (CC) or eigenvector centrality (EC). Significance was determined using the false discovery rate (FDR) controlled at a 5% level (53, 54). Similarly, an independent-samples t-test (assuming unequal variances) examined whether PBO minus OXY difference score was different for smokers versus nonsmokers in each of the 20 nodes of interest for CC or EC.

Although several measures were taken to minimize the contributions of head motion to the fMRI time series, there are more stringent approaches to control for the influence of head motion on fMRI time series (55) than used here. To address whether any residual head motion was correlated with graph-theory measures of connectivity, we examined Spearman-rank correlations between head motion and any of the 20 nodes × 2 graph-theory measures (EC and CC) × 2 genders × 2 treatment conditions (OXY or PBO) using FDR correction.

Finally, an exploratory analysis examined whether any of the five subjective rating measures collected before scanning on each visit (craving, anxiety, stress, STAI, CCQ) was correlated with graph theory measures. Spearman rank correlations were conducted for each of the five subjective measures × 20 nodes × 2 graph-theory measures (CC and EC) × 2 genders × 2 treatment conditions (OXY or PBO) using FDR correction.

fMRI Preprocessing

FMRIB’s FSL package1 was used unless otherwise noted. Images in each participant’s time series on each day were corrected for geometric distortion and head motion. Slice timing correction and spatial filtering (FWHM = 7.5 mm) were applied to each time series, which was then submitted to multiple regression using FSL to remove effects of global signal and head motion. Regressors included global signal [extracted from gray matter, white matter and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) masks, which were created using FSL’s FAST tissue segmentation tool], and six head motion parameters. The residual image from this regression step was then band-pass filtered (0.009 to 0.08 Hz) using AFNI (56). The spatially normalized image was then parcellated using a 294 region atlas—the 264 regions from Power et al. (57) with 30 additional subcortical regions (amygdala, hippocampus, striatum). Each region of interest (ROI) was represented by a 10-mm-diameter sphere. The BOLD signal time series was extracted in each of the 294 ROIs using FSL’s “feat query” function.

Connectome Measures

Before computing the 294 × 294 functional connectivity matrix, corrupt time points were identified with fractional displacement values using the “fsl_motion_outliers” command. For each corrupt time point, the preceding time point and two successive time points were removed from the time series for each subject and visit (57) using the RSFC Net toolbox2 implemented using the R software package (58). The mean percent scrubbed time points averaged over both visits was not significantly different between males (M = 0.13, SD = 0.06) and females (M = 0.12, SD = 0.06) according to an independent-samples t-test, t(91) = 0.56, p = 0.58.

The connectivity matrix was a weighted, signed adjacency matrix representing a fully connected undirected graph. Each matrix element reflected the partial correlation between two discreters fMRI time series while controlling for all other time series. We applied a shrinkage factor as to create a well-conditioned covariance matrix (5961)3. The mixing parameter is largely an optimal weight as a function of N to combine the observed covariance and a target matrix, such as a diagonal (i.e., no covariance/correlation between regions).

The RSFC Net toolbox was used to compute two graph-theory measures: EC and CC. EC is a spectral, self-referential measure of centrality (62, 63). A node with a high EC is connected to other nodes with a high eigenvector score. EC considers connections to influential nodes to be more important than connections to marginal nodes. Hence, EC reflects the global influence of a node on the network.

CEig[i]=|1λj=1NMi,jxj|

The eigenvector centrality of the i th node, C Eig [ i ], is defined as the absolute value of the i th number in the eigenvector belonging to the principal eigenvalue of the matrix M, which is denoted λ′.

CC is a local measure of segregation representing the fraction of a node’s neighbors that are also neighbors of each other; these patterns effectively form triangles around the node (6466). We used the CC formula for weighted and signed connectivity matrices provided by (66):

CCi=i,jws(j,i)w(i,q)ws(j,q)ij|ws(j,i)ws(i,q)|

CC reflects the degree of local influence in a network. In this formula, the triangle is denoted by the direct connection of the i th and j th nodes and an indirect connection through a q th node; s(i,j,q). The numerator is the sum of the products of the signed edge weights between the pairs s(i,j), s(i,q), and s( j,q) divided by the sum of the absolute value of the product of the edge weights for pairs s( j,i) and s(i,q). The denominator represents the maximum magnitude of the value the numerator can obtain.

EC and CC measures were chosen because they reflect different aspects of network organization. Network measures were always calculated using all 294 nodes. Visualization of nodes used BrainNet Viewer (67).

Twenty nodes were used as ROIs in subsequent analyses (Table 1): five insula regions, five ACC regions, six amygdala regions, and four striatal regions. ROIs were selected based on being strongly implicated in addiction (3, 17) and trauma (6871). Of the eight ACC regions available in the Power atlas, two that fell on the midline were eliminated and five of the remaining six that sampled different aspects of the rostral to dorsal gradient were chosen. Of the seven insula regions available in the Power atlas (only two in the left hemisphere), five were chosen that sampled anterior, mid, and posterior aspects of the insula, primarily in the right hemisphere as there were more of those in the Power atlas. All six amygdala, two accumbens, and two caudate regions were selected. Importantly, the network measures reflected the connectivity of a given node with all other nodes in the whole brain network, not just the connectivity among the 20 nodes of interest.

TABLE 1
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Table 1 Twenty regions of interest used as predictors.

Generalized Linear Model Analysis (Analysis 1)

The purpose of this analysis was to isolate regions that showed effects of OXY treatment and establish that changes in connectivity caused by OXY were modified by gender, childhood trauma (CTQ), and years of cocaine use (YRSUSE).

Generalized linear mixed effects models were developed to assess Analysis 1 (IBM SPSS tatistics; Version 24.0; IBM Corp., Armonk, NY). Models were developed to specifically assess the effects of treatment (OXY, PBO) and node (20 ROIs described above) as repeated effects, with gender, head motion, CTQ, and YRSUSE as additional variables. All models further adjust for study-specific design variables, specifically study visit and treatment order. To assess the hypothesis that gender, CTQ, and YRSUSE may modify the relationship between OXY and node response, model interactions were included in subsequent analysis. Both main effects and interactions were considered significant if p ≤ 0.05. Separate generalized linear models were conducted with CC and EC as outcome variables. This step was conducted before model selection (Analysis 2) to investigate and establish important interactions among variables of interest. Analysis 2 will then examine such interactions in more depth using model selection.

Automatic Linear Modeling (Analysis 2)

The purpose of this analysis was to conduct model selection to select the best set of brain regions and network properties associated with differing levels of childhood trauma and years of cocaine use. Eight different models were examined based on the combination of two different outcome variables (CTQ, YRSUSE), two genders (male, female), and two different network measures (CC, EC). For each of the eight models, model selection was conducted over 10 replications.

Model selection used Automatic Linear Modeling (ALM; IBM SPSS Statistics). ALM is a linear modeling approach in which a set of variables (i.e., network properties in each of the 20 ROIs) predicts an outcome (i.e., CTQ or YRSUSE). The treatment effect was expressed as a difference score in either CC or EC in the PBO condition minus the OXY condition in each of the 20 ROIs. A positive difference score reflected a reduction in connectivity because of treatment with OXY, whereas a negative difference score reflected increased connectivity because of OXY. ALM automatically trims outliers and transforms variables, if needed. ALM divides the full sample of subjects into a training set (70% of the data) and a test set (30% of the data; called the overfit prevention set in IBM SPSS Statistics). The modeling process used 10 replicated data sets, and training and test sets are randomly selected from each. Replicates were a random sample with replacement.

In ALM, if the number of predictor variables is 20 or fewer, a large subset of possible models is examined using “best subsets” (72). This approach determines the best subset of predictor variables using the average squared error (ASE) of the test set. The model with the lowest ASE is chosen by ALM as the best model. ALM yields a measure of model accuracy, which is 100 times the adjusted R 2 of the final model, Akaike’s Information Criterion (AIC), as well as the importance and weight (coefficient) of each predictor.

Predictor importance is a relative measure of how important each variable was in the prediction. IBM SPSS Statistics uses the leave-one-out method to compute importance based on the residual sum of squares by removing one predictor at a time from the final full model. The importance values all sum to 1.

To determine whether EC or CC yielded a better model for predicting CTQ or YRSUSE for males and females separately, the average accuracy across the 10 replications were compared qualitatively, and the number of significant models (p ≤ 0.05) across the 10 replications was considered. The network measure that yielded the highest average accuracy and more significant replications for a given gender and outcome variable combination was considered the better model. To determine the final set of predictors, the cumulative importance of predictors across the 10 replications was calculated. Predictors with cumulative importance >1 were considered for interpretation. Finally, to address potential collinearity among the predictors in the final models, the predictors with cumulative importance >1 were entered into a simultaneous linear regression, and variance inflation factors (VIFs) were determined for each model covariate; if a VIF exists greater than 4.0 (73), multicollinearity will be mitigated by choosing the collinear variable that produces the greatest model fit when included.

Results

Demographics and Subject Characteristics

Males were older than females and reported more years of cocaine use (Table 2). However, males and females were not different on any of the other demographic, cocaine use characteristics, or subjective measures. There were no significant differences between TRIO and PRISMA scanner data in any of the 20 nodes of interest for either CC or EC. There were also no significant differences between smokers and nonsmokers in any of the 20 nodes of interest for either CC or EC. Therefore, scanner type and smoking status were not included as variables in subsequent analyses.

TABLE 2
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Table 2 Demographics and subject characteristics.

Head motion was not correlated with CC or EC in any of the 20 nodes or treatment conditions. Although none met the threshold for significance, head motion was included in the two primary analyses below as a precaution given that only six head motion parameters were used as nuisance variables in preprocessing.

Finally, the exploratory correlation analysis between subjective ratings and graph theory measures yielded one significant correlation: males in the PBO condition who reported higher stress before scanning also showed higher EC in the left dorsal amygdala, rho = 0.53, p = 0.000046.

Analysis 1: Establish whether graph-theory measures reflecting treatment response are associated with childhood trauma and years of cocaine use and whether gender moderates these associations.

The generalized linear model with CC as the outcome variable and node, treatment, gender, head motion, CTQ, and YRSUSE as predictors yielded several significant effects and interactions (Supplement 1). CC varied by node (p = 0.0001), CTQ (p = 0.009), and head motion (p = 0.0001). The node effect was further modified by treatment (Node × Treatment interaction, p < 0.0001), and significant three-way interactions indicated that the treatment effect in different nodes was further modified by gender (Node × Treatment × Gender, p = 0.0001), CTQ (Node × Treatment × CTQ, p = 0.0001), and YRSUSE (Node × Treatment × YRSUSE, p = 0.0001). Figure 1A illustrates the Node × Treatment × Gender interaction for CC. OXY increased CC for males in the right ACC and left dorsal amygdala, whereas OXY increased CC for females in the right accumbens.

FIGURE 1
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Figure 1 Significant effect of oxytocin (OXY) treatment (solid bars) versus placebo (PBO) (shaded bars) in CUD females (blue) and males (red). (A) Effect of OXY on clustering coefficient in three nodes of interest: right anterior cingulate cortex (R ACC), left dorsal amygdala (L dAMG), and right nucleus accumbens (R NA). (B) Effect of OXY on eigenvector centrality in one node: right dorsal ACC (R dACC). Error bars are standard error of the mean. Horizontal bars with asterisk indicate a significant difference of OXY versus PBO at p < 0.05.

The generalized linear model with EC as the outcome variable and node, treatment, gender, head motion, CTQ, and YRSUSE as predictors yielded a main effect of node (p = 0.0001) and higher-order interactions with node (Supplement 1). The node effect was further modified by treatment and gender (Node × Treatment × Gender, p = 0.0001), treatment and CTQ (Node × Treatment × CTQ, p = 0.0001), and treatment and YRSUSE (Node × Treatment × YRSUSE, p = 0.0001). Figure 1B illustrates the Node × Treatment × Gender interaction for EC. OXY increased EC for females in the right dorsal ACC.

These analyses modeled the spatial correlation among the 20 nodes and isolated treatment effects in some of the nodes. For both EC and CC, these treatment effects were modified by gender, CTQ, and YRSUSE. The goal of the next analysis was to use model selection and machine learning to establish the network profiles associated with OXY-related changes in connectivity measures and CTQ or YRSUSE. Because gender modified these effects in Analysis 1, these analyses are conducted separately in males and females.

Analysis 2: Conduct model selection to select the best set of brain regions and network properties associated with childhood trauma and years of cocaine use.

Table 3 summarizes the performance of the 10 replications for each of the 8 models.

TABLE 3
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Table 3 Model accuracy (adjusted R2, top row) and p value (bottom row) for each replication for each model of interest.

Network Profile for CTQ in Males

In males, neither the CC nor the EC model was associated with CTQ reliably across replications. Only one replication was significant for CC, and no replications were significant for EC. These results indicate that OXY-related changes in graph-theory measures in the 20 nodes of interest are not associated with individual variations in CTQ scores in males.

Network Profile for CTQ in Females

In females, the best model for CTQ was based on EC. Across 10 replications, this model had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.27. Nine of the 10 replications yielded significant models. The model using CC as the graph-theory metric for CTQ had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.09, and none of the replications was significant.

In the EC model, three predictors had cumulative importance >1 (Figure 2). The scatter plots (Supplement 2) illustrate that for the right ACC, a higher CTQ was associated with a greater global influence on PBO than OXY, but for the right dorsal ACC and left rostral ACC, a higher CTQ was associated with a greater global influence on OXY than PBO.

FIGURE 2
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Figure 2 Association of Childhood Trauma Questionnaire (CTQ) scores with eigenvector centrality in females. Network nodes of interest are shown on a template brain in Montreal Neurological Institute (MNI) space, with left lateral (left panel), right lateral (right panel), and axial views (center). Anterior cingulate (ACC) nodes appear in red, insula nodes in yellow, striatum nodes in blue, and amygdala nodes in green. The size of each node reflects its cumulative importance across 10 replications of predictive modeling. Nodes with cumulative importance >1 are labeled anatomically. The arrow next to each label indicates the sign of the regression coefficient for that node. Nodes that failed to appear in any of the 10 replications do not appear in this figure.

Network Profile for YRSUSE in Males

In males, the best model for YRSUSE was based on EC. Across 10 replications, this model had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.16. Six of the 10 replications yielded significant models. In contrast, the model using CC as the graph-theory metric for YRSUSE had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.09 and only two replications were significant.

In the EC model, three predictors had cumulative importance >1 (Figure 3). The scatter plots (Supplement 2) illustrate that for the right dorsal ACC, higher CTQ was associated with greater global influence on PBO than OXY, but for the left medial amygdala, higher CTQ was associated with a greater global influence on OXY than PBO. Greater head motion was associated with fewer years of cocaine use.

FIGURE 3
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Figure 3 Association of years of cocaine use with eigenvector centrality in males. Network nodes of interest are shown on a template brain in MNI space, with left lateral (left panel), right lateral (right panel), and axial views (center). ACC nodes appear in red, insula nodes in yellow, striatum nodes in blue, and amygdala nodes in green. The size of each node reflects its cumulative importance across 10 replications of predictive modeling. Nodes with cumulative importance >1 are labeled anatomically. The arrow next to each label indicates the sign of the regression coefficient for that node. Nodes that failed to appear in any of the 10 replications do not appear in this figure.

Network Profile for YRSUSE in Females

In females, the best model for YRSUSE was based on CC. Across 10 replications, this model had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.20. Seven of the 10 replications yielded significant models. Although the model using EC as the graph-theory metric for CTQ had an average adjusted R 2 of 0.19, only three of the replications were significant. Although the two models had comparable accuracy, the models using CC as a predictor had more replications that were significant, so it was considered a better model than the EC model.

In the CC model, four predictors had cumulative importance >1 (Figure 4). The scatter plots (Supplement 2) illustrate that for the right rostral ACC, a higher CTQ was associated with a greater local influence on PBO than OXY, but for the left rostral ACC and right anterior-ventral insula, a higher CTQ was associated with a greater local influence on OXY than PBO. Greater head motion was associated with more years of cocaine use.

FIGURE 4
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Figure 4 Association of years of cocaine use with clustering coefficient in females. Network nodes of interest are shown on a template brain in MNI space, with left lateral (left panel), right lateral (right panel), and axial views (center). ACC nodes appear in red, insula nodes in yellow, striatum nodes in blue, and amygdala nodes in green. The size of each node reflects its cumulative importance across 10 replications of predictive modeling. Nodes with cumulative importance >1 are labeled anatomically. The arrow next to each label indicates the sign of the regression coefficient for that node. Nodes that failed to appear in any of the 10 replications do not appear in this figure.

For all of the final models, VIFs were less than 2 for all predictors, indicating no collinearity issues, so all variables were retained.

Discussion

The overall goal of this study was to discover how OXY changes functional network organization in men and women with CUD and to isolate network profiles that are associated with severity of cocaine use and childhood trauma. OXY induced increases in connectivity differently in men and women with CUD. In women, OXY increased local influence of the right accumbens and increased global influence of the right dorsal ACC. In men, OXY increased local influence of the left dorsal amygdala and right ACC.

The first hypothesis that childhood trauma would be associated with OXY-related connectivity changes in the amygdala was not strongly supported. Network profiles associated with individual variations in childhood trauma for females did not include amygdala nodes, and modeling of network profiles in males did not reliably yield significant models. Although the amygdala was not implicated in individual variations in childhood trauma, OXY increased local influence (CC) of the left dorsal amygdala in men. In addition, a higher global influence of this same amygdala region was associated with higher stress ratings in men on PBO. Although the functions of different amygdala nuclei in higher-level human behaviors is still debated, the dorsal (i.e., superficial) amygdala is involved in emotion processing, whereas the other amygdala nuclei play a role in fear, anxiety, and fear conditioning (27). Consequently, the association between dorsal amygdala global influence and stress ratings on PBO (in males) may reflect current emotional state rather than trauma history. In the PBO condition, a higher reported stress in males was associated with stronger global influence and more widespread connectivity of the left dorsal amygdala in males. In other words, the amygdala is exerting a stronger influence on other brain circuitry in the PBO condition, especially for males reporting more stress. Notably, OXY increased local influence of the left dorsal amygdala in males, suggesting that OXY shifts the influence of the left dorsal amygdala from global to more local and segregated from other brain circuitry. This shift on OXY may reflect an adaptive process, whereby stress-related amygdala activity is reduced.

The second hypothesis that years of cocaine use would be more strongly associated with OXY connectivity changes in the striatum was also not strongly supported given that none of the striatum nodes in males or females had cumulative importance that exceeded 1. However, OXY increased local influence of the right nucleus accumbens in females, indicating that it was influenced by OXY in females. Bethlehem and colleagues (28) similarly showed that OXY increased connectivity of the striatum with a broad network of brain regions in non-SUD women.

The third hypothesis that the major nodes of the salience network (insula, ACC) were expected to be associated with both childhood trauma and years of cocaine use was largely confirmed. ACC nodes predicted CTQ scores in females, and ACC and insula nodes predicted years of cocaine use in both males and females. The ACC was an important predictor in all models while the insula was an important predictor in one model (prediction of years of use in females). Local influence of the right ACC also increased on OXY in men, and global influence of the right dorsal ACC increased on OXY in women.

The fourth hypothesis was that network profiles associated with childhood trauma and years of cocaine use would be different between men and women. Stress circuitry (e.g., amygdala nodes) was expected to be more influential on network organization in females, whereas reward circuitry (e.g., striatum nodes) was expected to be more influential on network organization in males. Whereas the network profiles were indeed different between males and females, the amygdala was an important predictor of cocaine use in males rather than females (and was modulated by OXY in males), and the striatum was not an important predictor for either males or females, but the right accumbens was modulated by OXY in females.

The finding that amygdala connectivity was modulated by OXY, was associated with stress ratings under PBO, and was a significant component in the network profile for years of cocaine use in males but not females was not predicted. However, preclinical studies have reported that male rodents show greater OXY receptor binding in the amygdala than females, which is also modulated by breeding status in males (74). In addition, maltreated female adolescent rodents show significantly decreased OXY receptor binding in the amygdala compared to female controls (75). Although caution should be taken when translating preclinical findings to human study results, it is possible that the more prominent role for amygdala connectivity in CUD males in the present study is driven by higher OXY receptor binding in males and lower OXY receptor binding in females, particularly in those reporting more severe childhood trauma. This speculation, however, would need to be tested more directly in humans in future studies.

The predominant finding of the present study was that the salience network emerged as a critical component for OXY-induced changes in network profiles for childhood trauma and cocaine use in both males and females. Moreover, the ACC (rather than the insula) was the most prominent component in all models. The ACC is a critical node in the salience network that is functionally coupled to the insula. The ACC serves to influence external behaviors and motoric responses based on input from the insula (76), which processes interoceptive information and internal autonomic states (77). Given that the present study examined intrinsic connectivity (i.e., resting state) in the absence of external environmental input, the most salient information to be processed by subjects likely originated from internal bodily states. This may explain why the salience network was the primary influence on network organization. Had this study used external stimuli that could trigger reward responses, craving, or stress reactivity, the amygdala and striatum may have exerted a stronger influence on network organization.

Another potential explanation for the predominance of ACC nodes in influencing network organization is that the ACC is rich in OXY receptors (25). Because the present analysis focused on change in network connectivity related to OXY administration, those nodes that fall within brain regions with OXY receptors may have dominated network organization compared to regions that have fewer OXY receptors in humans, such as the striatum (25). It should be noted that the amygdala is also rich in OXY receptors, and this brain region emerged as an influential node in network profiles for individual variations in years of cocaine use in males. In addition, the exploratory analysis of subjective stress before scanning showed that higher reported stress was associated with greater global influence (EC) of the left dorsal amygdala in males in the PBO condition. These findings indicate that the amygdala may be an important locus for attenuating stress response in CUD males.

Wilcox and colleagues (17) have suggested that RSFC may be an important biomarker for treatment targets in SUDs. In their review of RSFC studies in SUD, they concluded that reduced connectivity between the salience network and executive control network and reduced connectivity within the executive control network are the most promising treatment targets for SUD. The present study has shown that OXY-related connectivity changes in components of the salience network, ACC, and insula are important for understanding individual variations in childhood trauma severity and cocaine use severity. Consequently, the present findings are consistent with the suggestion that the salience network is a potential treatment target.

It should be noted that associations between OXY-induced connectivity changes and childhood trauma or cocaine use severity were not universally in a single direction. In other words, higher cocaine use and greater childhood trauma were associated with both increases and decreases in connectivity because of OXY relative to PBO. Because this analysis considered a node’s relation to all other nodes in the network, it is reasonable that connectivity in one region could increase on OXY, whereas connectivity in another region could decrease. This is particularly true for graph-theory measures like CC and eigenvector centrality, which consider not only the direct connections to a node but also the connections of the connected nodes.

The two graph-theory properties examined here represent different aspects of network organization—local influence (CC) versus global influence (EC) of a node on the whole-brain network. CC has been investigated in prior rsfMRI studies of SUD (7883), and only one study has examined EC in smokers (83). In the present study, both properties showed utility in characterizing network profiles for CTQ and years of cocaine use in CUD, but EC explained more variance across models and replications. The present findings demonstrate that EC is a potentially more useful graph-theory measure to consider when characterizing network profiles associated with individual differences in CUD. However, CC was more sensitive to changes in RSFC because of OXY.

Limitations

One potential limitation of the present study is that we did not examine executive control network connectivity directly but focused instead on the influence of salience network, amygdala, and striatum nodes on intrinsic network organization. This could be viewed as a missed opportunity given a recent review suggesting that executive control network connectivity is a promising treatment target for SUD (17). However, the reason to limit the number of network nodes in the analysis was to avoid overfitting with automatic linear modeling. Nevertheless, the graph-theory measures used in this study reflect the connectivity of a given node with the entire brain, including frontal regions, thereby allowing for more specific hypotheses involving frontal cortex connectivity to be tested in future investigations.

The present analysis took several approaches to minimize contributions of head motion to graph-theory measures of connectivity (i.e., elimination of data sets with excessive head motion, temporal censoring, inclusion of six rigid-body head motion parameters as nuisance variables), and none of the graph-theory measures in individual nodes of interest was correlated with head motion. Therefore, the effects of head motion did not contaminate the measures of connectivity. Nevertheless, there are many other approaches to head-motion nuisance regression that are more stringent than the approach used in the present study [e.g., Ref. (55)], which could be considered a limitation. In addition, head motion emerged as a significant predictor of years of cocaine use in the final models that resulted from ALM. These findings indicate that head motion was associated with the outcome variable years of cocaine use. However, this association was different in males and females. For males, more years of cocaine use was associated with reduced head motion, but for females, more years of cocaine use was associated with increased head motion. The reason for this gender-specific divergence is not immediately apparent, but the present findings suggest that the extent of head motion is linked to individual variations in cocaine use and should probably be included in analyses even when head motion effects on connectivity are minimized.

Another potential limitation is that several substance use characteristics were not considered in the analyses but could be additional influences on changes in connectivity because of OXY. For example, positive THC tests and length of abstinence period before scanning could all affect resting-state connectivity and change in connectivity because of OXY. Future studies with larger samples should examine the influence of these substance use variables on OXY treatment response in CUD.

Conclusion

In conclusion, this study adds to the evidence suggesting that RSFC may be an important biomarker in identifying treatment targets in SUDs. Salience network regions, especially the ACC, emerged as primary loci for OXY-induced changes in connectivity in both men and women with CUD, whereas the amygdala was an additional important locus for OXY response in males with CUD. These brain regions may serve as potential target areas for future OXY-based treatments. In addition, the present findings suggest that treatment strategies for CUD need to consider gender differences in OXY response.

Ethics Statement

This study was carried out in accordance with the recommendations of Good Clinical Practice Guidelines and the Declaration of Helsinki with written informed consent from all subjects. All subjects gave written informed consent in accordance with the Declaration of Helsinki. The protocol was approved by the Medical University of South Carolina Institutional Review Board.

Author Contributions

NB, KB, JJ, AM-C, and MM-S contributed to the design and conduct of the study. NB and JJ supervised and conducted the data analysis with contributions from KB, CC, AM-C, and BV. NB, KB, JJ, AM-C, and BS were involved in the interpretation of the data. JJ wrote the first draft of the manuscript. NB, KB, AM-C, BS, and BV helped write sections of and edited the manuscript.

Funding

This study was sponsored by National Institute on Drug Abuse grants P50DA016511 and P50DA016511-S1 (KB) and K23DA045099 (BS), with additional support from the National Center for Advancing Translational Sciences grant UL1TR001450 (KB).

Conflict of Interest Statement

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Footnotes

  1. ^ www.fmrib.ox.ac.uk/fsl
  2. ^ https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.1403924
  3. ^ http://strimmerlab.org/software/corpcor

Supplementary Material

The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00502/full#supplementary-material

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Keywords: connectome, graph-theory, resting state, gender differences, functional connectivity

Citation: Joseph JE, Vaughan BK, Camp CC, Baker NL, Sherman BJ, Moran-Santa Maria M, McRae-Clark A and Brady KT (2019) Oxytocin-Induced Changes in Intrinsic Network Connectivity in Cocaine Use Disorder: Modulation by Gender, Childhood Trauma, and Years of Use. Front. Psychiatry 10:502. doi: 10.3389/fpsyt.2019.00502

Received: 01 January 2019; Accepted: 25 June 2019;
Published: 19 July 2019.

Edited by:

Hamed Ekhtiari, Laureate Institute for Brain Research, United States

Reviewed by:

Yan-Xue Xue, Peking University, China
Xiaosong He, University of Pennsylvania, United States

Copyright © 2019 Joseph, Vaughan, Camp, Baker, Sherman, Moran-Santa Maria, McRae-Clark and Brady. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.

*Correspondence: Jane E. Joseph, josep@musc.edu

Disclaimer: All claims expressed in this article are solely those of the authors and do not necessarily represent those of their affiliated organizations, or those of the publisher, the editors and the reviewers. Any product that may be evaluated in this article or claim that may be made by its manufacturer is not guaranteed or endorsed by the publisher.