Weng, Yihe and Kruschwitz, Johann and Rueda-Delgado, Laura M and Ruddy, Kathy L and Boyle, Rory and Franzen, Luisa and Serin, Emin and Nweze, Tochukwu and Hanson, Jamie and Smyth, Alannah and Farnan, Tom and Banaschewski, Tobias and Bokde, Arun L W and Desrivières, Sylvane and Flor, Herta and Grigis, Antoine and Garavan, Hugh and Gowland, Penny A and Heinz, Andreas and Brühl, Rüdiger and Martinot, Jean-Luc and Martinot, Marie-Laure Paillère and Artiges, Eric and McGrath, Jane and Nees, Frauke and Papadopoulos Orfanos, Dimitri and Paus, Tomas and Poustka, Luise and Holz, Nathalie and Fröhner, Juliane and Smolka, Michael N and Vaidya, Nilakshi and Schumann, Gunter and Walter, Henrik and Whelan, Robert (2024) A robust brain network for sustained attention from adolescence to adulthood that predicts later substance use. eLife, 13, RP97150. https://doi.org/10.7554/elife.97150.
External website: https://elifesciences.org/articles/97150
Substance use, including cigarettes and cannabis, is associated with poorer sustained attention in late adolescence and early adulthood. Previous studies were predominantly cross-sectional or under-powered and could not indicate if impairment in sustained attention was a predictor of substance use or a marker of the inclination to engage in such behavior. This study explored the relationship between sustained attention and substance use across a longitudinal span from ages 14 to 23 in over 1000 participants. Behaviors and brain connectivity associated with diminished sustained attention at age 14 predicted subsequent increases in cannabis and cigarette smoking, establishing sustained attention as a robust biomarker for vulnerability to substance use. Individual differences in network strength relevant to sustained attention were preserved across developmental stages and sustained attention networks generalized to participants in an external dataset. In summary, brain networks of sustained attention are robust, consistent, and able to predict aspects of later substance use.
B Substances > Cannabis / Marijuana
B Substances > Tobacco (cigarette smoking)
E Concepts in biomedical areas > Nervous system physiology (brain, neural)
J Health care, prevention, harm reduction and treatment > Risk and protective factors > Risk factors
T Demographic characteristics > Adolescent / youth (teenager / young person)
VA Geographic area > International
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