Affective And Cognitive Processes Postpartum In Mothers With Opioid Use Disorder

NIH RePORTER · NIH · P50 · $303,375 · view on reporter.nih.gov ↗

Abstract

7. PROJECT SUMMARY/ABSTRACT The current opioid epidemic increasingly impacts women of childbearing age and pregnant women, creating an urgent need to identify optimal ways to support women with opioid use disorder (OUD) who are parenting. While it is understood that women with OUD and their children face significant challenges, the nature of these challenges are poorly understood, making it difficult to provide targeted interventions for this population. The reward-stress dysregulation model of addicted parenting put forth by Mayes and colleagues highlights reward sensitivity and stress reactivity as overlapping core processes involved in addiction and parenting. The model postulates that low reward sensitivity and heightened stress reactivity among women with substance use difficulties will contribute to parenting difficulties and increased likelihood of ongoing addictive behaviors. The proposed project will examine several key elements of this model that remain untested, and consider the role of inhibitory control, a key component of executive functioning, which plays an important role in both addiction and parenting. The project focuses on the postpartum period as a critical time for the emergence of parenting behaviors and formation of emotional connectedness and attachment between mother and infant. Prior research highlights the postpartum period as a time of heightened behavioral and biological plasticity for core cognitive and affective processes relevant to addiction and parenting. As such, it represents a time of potential vulnerability and opportunity for women with OUD and their children. The proposed project will employ a prospective longitudinal design to examine core cognitive and affective processes, reward sensitivity, stress reactivity/regulation and inhibitory control, over the first year postpartum in women with (N=60) and without OUD (N=60). Assessments will occur in late pregnancy and at 6-weeks, 6-months and 12-months postpartum. We will employ multimodal assessment of the constructs of interest. We will examine longitudinal trajectories of these cognitive and affective processes to characterize plasticity during the postpartum period, and to identify key contextual factors contributing to the trajectory of these processes for women with OUD and without OUD. We will consider how interactions between reward sensitivity, stress reactivity and inhibitory control relate to maternal parenting behaviors and the extent to which these processes explain differences in parenting and infant-maternal attachment and emotional connectedness for women with versus without OUD. Finally, we will employ functional magnetic resonance imaging in a subsample of women with (N=30) and without (N=30) OUD to explore the underlying neurocircuitry of the core cognitive and affective processes of interest. Examination of how core cognitive and affective processes relate to emerging parenting behaviors and infant- maternal attachment for women with OUD w...

Key facts

NIH application ID
10177994
Project number
5P50DA048756-03
Recipient
UNIVERSITY OF OREGON
Principal Investigator
Kristen L Mackiewicz Seghete
Activity code
P50
Funding institute
NIH
Fiscal year
2021
Award amount
$303,375
Award type
5
Project period
2019-08-15 → 2024-05-31