Delay discounting and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity are related to weight status in adolescents from the ABCD study Article

Overholtzer, LN, Ahmadi, H, Bottenhorn, K et al. (2024). Delay discounting and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity are related to weight status in adolescents from the ABCD study . 10.1111/ijpo.13173

cited authors

  • Overholtzer, LN; Ahmadi, H; Bottenhorn, K; Hsu, E; Herting, MM

abstract

  • Background: Despite the growing epidemic of paediatric obesity, questions remain regarding potential neural mechanisms for individual risk. Delay discounting is a cognitive process of comparison of valuation between immediate and delayed reward, which has been inconsistently linked to weight status. Moreover, central to the brain's reward system is the nucleus accumbens, a region structurally and functionally altered in obesity. Objectives/Methods: This study aimed to examine the relationships between two continuous metrics of weight status, performance on a monetary delay-discounting task and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity in 10–12-year-olds from the Adolescent Brain and Cognitive Development (ABCD) Study. Results: Using multilevel longitudinal linear modelling, we found greater discounting was associated with higher BMI Z-scores (BMIz) and waist-to-height ratio Z-scores (WHtRz) (N = 3819). Moreover, we observed functional connectivity of the nucleus accumbens to the cingulo-opercular, dorsal attention, fronto-parietal, salience and ventral attention networks were predictive of BMIz (N = 1817). Nucleus accumbens functional connectivity was not found to mediate the association between delay-discounting behaviour and BMIz. Conclusions: Delay discounting and nucleus accumbens functional connectivity are independently related to weight status in a large sample of early adolescents. A better understanding of the relationship between reward and overeating behaviours may better inform obesity interventions.

publication date

  • January 1, 2024

Digital Object Identifier (DOI)