Regional brain age deviations reveal divergent developmental pathways in youth
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Background
Normative modeling of brain development has gained traction for quantifying individual deviations in maturation. The brain age gap (BAG), the difference between predicted age from MRI features and chronological age, offers a potential individualized normative metric of neurodevelopment. However, consistent patterns across psychiatric disorders remain elusive, and no studies have examined whether BAG can predict developmental trajectories within an inclusive continuous model of youth’s cognition and behavior.
Methods
Using longitudinal data from the Adolescent Brain Cognitive Development Study (ages 9-15, n=9,074), we built 8 region-specific brain age models using volumes, thicknesses, and surface areas of parcels from the Brainnetome adolescent atlas. We derived psychiatric diagnoses from a parental questionnaire. Multivariate linear regression was used to assess case-control differences and cross-sectional continuous cognitive/behavioral profiles. We modeled cognitive/behavioral trajectories using a multivariate joint latent-class mixed model and assessed the relationship with BAG values using multinomial logistic regression.
Results
Children with ADHD showed delayed maturation across multiple regions (Cohen’s d : - 0.12 to -0.08), while subcortical BAG emerged as a transdiagnostic indicator of delayed development ( d : -0.07, p fdr = 0.024). Accelerated maturation characterized the high cognition and low symptom profile, while the inverse was found for the low cognition profile. Three developmental trajectories were identified: stable, towards externalizing behaviors, or internalizing behaviors. Widespread accelerated maturation predicted evolution towards internalizing behaviors but was protective against the externalizing trajectory.
Conclusions
Integrating BAG with continuous cognitive and behavioral profiles yielded a plausible framework for early identification of atypical trajectories, potentially contributing to personalized medicine in psychiatry.