Altered neurodevelopmental trajectories of brain structure in Tourette syndrome and Chronic Tic Disorders

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Abstract

Tourette syndrome (TS) is a neurodevelopmental disorder characterized by symptoms that emerge in childhood and often improve or even disappear in adulthood, providing a model for understanding how altered brain development shapes neural structure and function. We investigate brain structural alterations in TS and Chronic Tic Disorders (TS/CTD) across development, presenting the largest structural neuroimaging analysis for TS/CTD to date (1,803 individuals from the ENIGMA-TS Working Group), and integrating with large-scale genomewide association studies. Nonlinear age effects were observed in cortical thickness across development and in thalamic volume in children, indicating altered trajectories of brain maturation. Pediatric and adult TS/CTD showed distinct structural patterns, with widespread alterations in childhood and more focal changes in adulthood. Children also showed the most prominent effects highlighting the involvement of orbitofrontal cortex and putamen, alongside additional regions such as frontal and paralimbic areas. Genetic pleiotropy analyses identified overlap between TS/CTD-associated genetic effects on brain structure and neuroanatomical differences. Cross-disorder comparisons revealed correlations with ADHD and OCD and age-related patterns. These findings demonstrate altered neurodevelopmental trajectories in TS/CTD and implicate systems underlying inhibitory control and urge regulation.

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