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Neural responses to reward anticipation and feedback in adult and adolescent cannabis users and controls

Authors :
Martine Skumlien
Claire Mokrysz
Tom P. Freeman
Matthew B. Wall
Michael Bloomfield
Rachel Lees
Anna Borissova
Kat Petrilli
James Carson
Tiernan Coughlan
Shelan Ofori
Christelle Langley
Barbara J. Sahakian
H. Valerie Curran
Will Lawn
Skumlien, Martine [0000-0003-3552-2653]
Bloomfield, Michael [0000-0002-1972-4610]
Langley, Christelle [0000-0001-5061-2820]
Sahakian, Barbara J [0000-0001-7352-1745]
Lawn, Will [0000-0002-0143-2724]
Apollo - University of Cambridge Repository
Publication Year :
2022
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 2022.

Abstract

Funder: Aker Foundation<br />Funder: Wallitt Foundation, Eton College<br />Chronic use of drugs may alter the brain's reward system, though the extant literature concerning long-term cannabis use and neural correlates of reward processing has shown mixed results. Adolescents may be more vulnerable to the adverse effects of cannabis than adults; however, this has not been investigated for reward processing. As part of the 'CannTeen' study, in the largest functional magnetic resonance imaging study of reward processing and cannabis use to date, we investigated reward anticipation and feedback in 125 adult (26-29 years) and adolescent (16-17 years) cannabis users (1-7 days/week cannabis use) and gender- and age-matched controls, using the Monetary Incentive Delay task. Blood-oxygen-level-dependent responses were examined using region of interest (ROI) analyses in the bilateral ventral striatum for reward anticipation and right ventral striatum and left ventromedial prefrontal cortex for feedback, and exploratory whole-brain analyses. Results showed no User-Group or User-Group × Age-Group effects during reward anticipation or feedback in pre-defined ROIs. These null findings were supported by post hoc Bayesian analyses. However, in the whole-brain analysis, cannabis users had greater feedback activity in the prefrontal and inferior parietal cortex compared to controls. In conclusion, cannabis users and controls had similar neural responses during reward anticipation and in hypothesised reward-related regions during reward feedback. The whole-brain analysis revealed tentative evidence of greater fronto-parietal activity in cannabis users during feedback. Adolescents showed no increased vulnerability compared with adults. Overall, reward anticipation and feedback processing appear spared in adolescent and adult cannabis users, but future longitudinal studies are needed to corroborate this.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3fcca2ca0a0b145bfc26ce7d8eb6888c