Texarkana Gazette

Researcher­s look to brain images to predict who will attempt suicide

- By Aneri Pattani

PHILADELPH­IA—Therapists working with people at risk for suicide rely on the patient’s words to determine how serious they might be. They can’t look inside the patient’s mind to know for sure. Researcher­s in Pittsburgh are hoping to change that.

With the help of a $3.8 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, they will analyze the difference­s in brain scans of suicidal and non-suicidal young adults to detect those most at risk and develop personaliz­ed therapies. The ultimate goal is to use brain imaging to predict who will attempt suicide, researcher­s said.

“We’ve shown retroactiv­ely we can tell who has made an attempt,” said Marcel Just, a professor of psychology at Carnegie Mellon University, who is conducting the research with David Brent, endowed chair in suicide studies at the University of Pittsburgh. “But it would be enormously valuable if we can tell who’s going to make an attempt. That could actually save lives.”

Suicide rates have been rising across the country, and it is the second leading cause of death among college students. By identifyin­g levels of risk, “you may be able to give people at higher risk more intensive treatment,” Brent said.

The government grant will be used to advance Just and Brent’s previous research, published in Nature Human Behavior in 2017.

In that study, two groups of young adults—one with suicidal tendencies and one without—were asked to think about a series of words while they underwent fMRI (functional MRI) scans. Participan­ts were given words associated with death, as well as some that represente­d positive concepts, such as “carefree,” or negative concepts like “trouble.”

The difference­s in the brain activity were distinct enough that a computer could determine with more than 90 percent accuracy whether a participan­t had suicidal tendencies or not based on the scans alone. It could also distinguis­h between a participan­t who had made a suicide attempt and one who had only thought about it.

The findings suggest that a disorder changes the way concepts are represente­d in the brain, Just said. And those changes are meaningful.

For example, when thinking about death, people with suicidal thoughts showed greater brain activity in areas associated with thoughts and emotions about oneself. That suggests they associate death with themselves more than the average person would, Just said.

The study also found that people with suicidal thoughts experience different emotions when they think about certain concepts. For instance, when asked to think about death, people with suicidal tendencies showed more brain activity associated with shame than others.

Researcher­s hope this informatio­n could eventually lead to personaliz­ed treatment strategies for suicidal patients. “Just as you’d videotape a golf swing and see what’s wrong with it, you would look at the brain scan and see what’s wrong with the thought,” Just said. Based on that, therapy might focus on changing the associatio­n between death and shame.

This idea will be put to the test in the new study, set to begin in September. It will involve 450 participan­ts, split into three groups: those with suicidal tendencies, those with a psychiatri­c disorder but who are not thinking of suicide and a healthy control group. Each participan­t will have their brain scanned at the beginning of the study and after a three-month window during which therapy will be given. Researcher­s will analyze difference­s between the two to see whether therapy changes patients’ neural representa­tions of the concepts. They will also follow up with patients over time. If any attempt suicide, researcher­s will analyze their scans to see whether they were predictive.

“It could give us a window into the suicidal mind that we don’t have now,” Brent said.

Currently, patients are evaluated for suicidal risk through a psychiatri­c interview, said Maria Oquendo, chairman of the department of psychiatry at the University of Pennsylvan­ia’s Perelman School of Medicine. It takes into account the patient’s present and past thoughts of suicide, as well as family history of mental illness.

But oftentimes, people won’t reveal they’re having suicidal thoughts because they’ve already decided to act, she said. In those cases, having a medical test would be helpful.

“But I don’t imagine that after five years, we’re really going to be able to do it,” said Oquendo, who is not associated with the study.

Developing a precise test involves time and repeated studies. Even if it works in a population, a test has to be very sensitive to provide useful informatio­n on any one individual, Oquendo said.

 ?? TNS ?? ■ University of Pittsburgh’s David Brent, left, stands next to Carnegie Mellon’s Marcel Just. With the help of a $3.8 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, they will analyze the difference­s in brain scans of suicidal and non-suicidal young adults to detect those most at risk and develop personaliz­ed therapies.
TNS ■ University of Pittsburgh’s David Brent, left, stands next to Carnegie Mellon’s Marcel Just. With the help of a $3.8 million grant from the National Institute of Mental Health, they will analyze the difference­s in brain scans of suicidal and non-suicidal young adults to detect those most at risk and develop personaliz­ed therapies.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States