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Major depressive disorder (MDD) is associated with significant cognitive impairment throughout the life-course, which may progress toward MCI and dementia with age. Antidepressant medications are the first line of treatment; however, they fail to adequately address cognitive deficits and prevent relapse. Sustained cognitive impairment into euthymic periods may relate to underlying neurobiological changes, which could potentially be addressed through Cognitive Behavioural Therapy (CBT). Notably, CBT has been shown to improve cognitive domains including divided attention, memory, and processing speed while preventing depression relapse. Midlife represents a critical period in which shared neurobiological factors (such as brain changes on a vascular, morphological, and functional level) underlying depression and cognitive impairment could accelerate toward MCI and dementia. An updated understanding of neurobiological correlates of midlife depression and CBT response through multimodal neuroimaging is critical to improving affective and cognitive outcomes in this population.
The overarching objective of this project is to use multimodal neuroimaging to quantify the neurobiological and clinical impact of CBT in midlife depression. Specifically, we aim to:
We hypothesize that midlife depression will be associated with functional and structural neural connectivity changes, which will be accompanied by vascular pathology. Adequate CBT response (i.e., improvements in mood and cognitive function) will be associated with amelioration of neurobiological changes.
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30 participants in 1 patient group
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