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The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)

Childhood stroke occurs from birth to 18 years of age, ranks among the top ten childhood causes of death, and leaves lifelong neurological impairments. Arterial ischemic stroke in infancy and childhood occurs due to arterial occlusion in the brain, resulting in a focal lesion. Our understanding of m...

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Autores principales: Domi, Trish, Robertson, Amanda, Lee, Wayne, Wintle, Richard F., Stence, Nicholas, Bernard, Timothy, Kirton, Adam, Carlson, Helen, Andrade, Andrea, Rafay, Mubeen F., Bjornson, Bruce, Kim, Danny, Dowling, Michael, Bonnett, Wilmot, Rivkin, Michael, Krishnan, Pradeep, Shroff, Manohar, Ertl-Wagner, Birgit, Strother, Stephen, Arnott, Steven, Wintermark, Max, Kassner, Andrea, deVeber, Gabrielle, Dlamini, Nomazulu
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Elsevier 2023
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10331307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37354865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103438
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author Domi, Trish
Robertson, Amanda
Lee, Wayne
Wintle, Richard F.
Stence, Nicholas
Bernard, Timothy
Kirton, Adam
Carlson, Helen
Andrade, Andrea
Rafay, Mubeen F.
Bjornson, Bruce
Kim, Danny
Dowling, Michael
Bonnett, Wilmot
Rivkin, Michael
Krishnan, Pradeep
Shroff, Manohar
Ertl-Wagner, Birgit
Strother, Stephen
Arnott, Steven
Wintermark, Max
Kassner, Andrea
deVeber, Gabrielle
Dlamini, Nomazulu
author_facet Domi, Trish
Robertson, Amanda
Lee, Wayne
Wintle, Richard F.
Stence, Nicholas
Bernard, Timothy
Kirton, Adam
Carlson, Helen
Andrade, Andrea
Rafay, Mubeen F.
Bjornson, Bruce
Kim, Danny
Dowling, Michael
Bonnett, Wilmot
Rivkin, Michael
Krishnan, Pradeep
Shroff, Manohar
Ertl-Wagner, Birgit
Strother, Stephen
Arnott, Steven
Wintermark, Max
Kassner, Andrea
deVeber, Gabrielle
Dlamini, Nomazulu
author_sort Domi, Trish
collection PubMed
description Childhood stroke occurs from birth to 18 years of age, ranks among the top ten childhood causes of death, and leaves lifelong neurological impairments. Arterial ischemic stroke in infancy and childhood occurs due to arterial occlusion in the brain, resulting in a focal lesion. Our understanding of mechanisms of injury and repair associated with focal injury in the developing brain remains rudimentary. Neuroimaging can reveal important insights into these mechanisms. In adult stroke population, multi-center neuroimaging studies are common and have accelerated the translation process leading to improvements in treatment and outcome. These studies are centered on the growing evidence that neuroimaging measures and other biomarkers (e.g., from blood and cerebrospinal fluid) can enhance our understanding of mechanisms of risk and injury and be used as complementary outcome markers. These factors have yet to be studied in pediatric stroke because most neuroimaging studies in this population have been conducted in single-centred, small cohorts. By pooling neuroimaging data across multiple sites, larger cohorts of patients can significantly boost study feasibility and power in elucidating mechanisms of brain injury, repair and outcomes. These aims are particularly relevant in pediatric stroke because of the decreased incidence rates and the lack of mechanism-targeted trials. Toward these aims, we developed the Pediatric Stroke Neuroimaging Platform (PEDSNIP) in 2015, funded by The Brain Canada Platform Support Grant, to focus on three identified neuroimaging priorities. These were: developing and harmonizing multisite clinical protocols, creating the infrastructure and methods to import, store and organize the large clinical neuroimaging dataset from multiple sites through the International Pediatric Stroke Study (IPSS), and enabling central searchability. To do this, developed a two-pronged approach that included building 1) A Clinical-MRI Data Repository (standard of care imaging) linked to clinical data and longitudinal outcomes and 2) A Research-MRI neuroimaging data set acquired through our extensive collaborative, multi-center, multidisciplinary network. This dataset was collected prospectively in eight North American centers to test the feasibility and implementation of harmonized advanced Research-MRI, with the addition of clinical information, genetic and proteomic studies, in a cohort of children presenting with acute ischemic stroke. Here we describe the process that enabled the development of PEDSNIP built to provide the infrastructure to support neuroimaging research priorities in pediatric stroke. Having built this Platform, we are now able to utilize the largest neuroimaging and clinical data pool on pediatric stroke data worldwide to conduct hypothesis-driven research. We are actively working on a bioinformatics approach to develop predictive models of risk, injury and repair and accelerate breakthrough discoveries leading to mechanism-targeted treatments that improve outcomes and minimize the burden following childhood stroke. This unique transformational resource for scientists and researchers has the potential to result in a paradigm shift in the management, outcomes and quality of life in children with stroke and their families, with far-reaching benefits for other brain conditions of people across the lifespan.
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spelling pubmed-103313072023-07-11 The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP) Domi, Trish Robertson, Amanda Lee, Wayne Wintle, Richard F. Stence, Nicholas Bernard, Timothy Kirton, Adam Carlson, Helen Andrade, Andrea Rafay, Mubeen F. Bjornson, Bruce Kim, Danny Dowling, Michael Bonnett, Wilmot Rivkin, Michael Krishnan, Pradeep Shroff, Manohar Ertl-Wagner, Birgit Strother, Stephen Arnott, Steven Wintermark, Max Kassner, Andrea deVeber, Gabrielle Dlamini, Nomazulu Neuroimage Clin Regular Article Childhood stroke occurs from birth to 18 years of age, ranks among the top ten childhood causes of death, and leaves lifelong neurological impairments. Arterial ischemic stroke in infancy and childhood occurs due to arterial occlusion in the brain, resulting in a focal lesion. Our understanding of mechanisms of injury and repair associated with focal injury in the developing brain remains rudimentary. Neuroimaging can reveal important insights into these mechanisms. In adult stroke population, multi-center neuroimaging studies are common and have accelerated the translation process leading to improvements in treatment and outcome. These studies are centered on the growing evidence that neuroimaging measures and other biomarkers (e.g., from blood and cerebrospinal fluid) can enhance our understanding of mechanisms of risk and injury and be used as complementary outcome markers. These factors have yet to be studied in pediatric stroke because most neuroimaging studies in this population have been conducted in single-centred, small cohorts. By pooling neuroimaging data across multiple sites, larger cohorts of patients can significantly boost study feasibility and power in elucidating mechanisms of brain injury, repair and outcomes. These aims are particularly relevant in pediatric stroke because of the decreased incidence rates and the lack of mechanism-targeted trials. Toward these aims, we developed the Pediatric Stroke Neuroimaging Platform (PEDSNIP) in 2015, funded by The Brain Canada Platform Support Grant, to focus on three identified neuroimaging priorities. These were: developing and harmonizing multisite clinical protocols, creating the infrastructure and methods to import, store and organize the large clinical neuroimaging dataset from multiple sites through the International Pediatric Stroke Study (IPSS), and enabling central searchability. To do this, developed a two-pronged approach that included building 1) A Clinical-MRI Data Repository (standard of care imaging) linked to clinical data and longitudinal outcomes and 2) A Research-MRI neuroimaging data set acquired through our extensive collaborative, multi-center, multidisciplinary network. This dataset was collected prospectively in eight North American centers to test the feasibility and implementation of harmonized advanced Research-MRI, with the addition of clinical information, genetic and proteomic studies, in a cohort of children presenting with acute ischemic stroke. Here we describe the process that enabled the development of PEDSNIP built to provide the infrastructure to support neuroimaging research priorities in pediatric stroke. Having built this Platform, we are now able to utilize the largest neuroimaging and clinical data pool on pediatric stroke data worldwide to conduct hypothesis-driven research. We are actively working on a bioinformatics approach to develop predictive models of risk, injury and repair and accelerate breakthrough discoveries leading to mechanism-targeted treatments that improve outcomes and minimize the burden following childhood stroke. This unique transformational resource for scientists and researchers has the potential to result in a paradigm shift in the management, outcomes and quality of life in children with stroke and their families, with far-reaching benefits for other brain conditions of people across the lifespan. Elsevier 2023-05-19 /pmc/articles/PMC10331307/ /pubmed/37354865 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103438 Text en © 2023 Published by Elsevier Inc. https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/This is an open access article under the CC BY-NC-ND license (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/).
spellingShingle Regular Article
Domi, Trish
Robertson, Amanda
Lee, Wayne
Wintle, Richard F.
Stence, Nicholas
Bernard, Timothy
Kirton, Adam
Carlson, Helen
Andrade, Andrea
Rafay, Mubeen F.
Bjornson, Bruce
Kim, Danny
Dowling, Michael
Bonnett, Wilmot
Rivkin, Michael
Krishnan, Pradeep
Shroff, Manohar
Ertl-Wagner, Birgit
Strother, Stephen
Arnott, Steven
Wintermark, Max
Kassner, Andrea
deVeber, Gabrielle
Dlamini, Nomazulu
The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title_full The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title_fullStr The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title_full_unstemmed The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title_short The development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (PEDSNIP)
title_sort development of the pediatric stroke neuroimaging platform (pedsnip)
topic Regular Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC10331307/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/37354865
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nicl.2023.103438
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